Sunday, November 23, 2008

Final Thoughts...

The term is coming to an end and I am still trying to articulate my thoughts about everything that we've read and discussed in class. I personally would not have picked up any of these books if I had saw them in a bookstore- but after reading them I found myself enjoying each one of them! Ok, maybe not Marti as much as the others probably due to its level of Spanish .
I am very glad to have read all these books because it allowed me to explore a world that I thought I was unable to relate to. However, reading about their daily struggles and triumphs tugged at my emotions and the fact that their stories were short, and sometimes even fragmented, made me completely drawn to them because the stories were so personal. Each story about Latin-American life was unique because if its details but yet the feeling behind each story represented a whole. When I think back to all the books we've read, all the stories in every book seem to come together to form one giant memory. I don't think about each book with its own title and meaning, rather, I find it hard to differentiate which story belonged to which. And that is what I found the most interesting/important.When the young boy in Y No Se Lo Trago La Tierra reflects all that has happened in the year, it is a compilation of all the fragments and everything becomes a whole. Like in Y No Se Lo Trago La Tierra, i feel that the fragmented stories represent each book that we've read and the final pages represents what I feel right now. All the stories come together as one because I think about how the many voices are conveying the emotion.

1 comment:

katiekat said...

I agree with your comment that the fragmentation of the stories, although at times confusing, definitely gave the stories a more personal feel.
That's a nice observation about how the all the stories were unique but that they all contributed to the big picture of latin american life and immigration. You can look at it as how the 'many voice are conveying the emotion' or how the few voices of these authors are conveying the emotions of many.