The House On Mango Street

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The House On Mango Street is a 1984 young-adult novel by Sandra Cisneros. It is structured as a series of vignettes told from the point of view of Esperanza, a young Mexican girl, who describes her neighborhood, her life and the people she knows.


Tropes used in The House On Mango Street include:
  • Abusive Parents: Sally's dad beats her.
  • Babies Make Everything Better Averted like whoa.
  • Bratty Teenage Daughter: Esperanza's parents tell her she is being this when she stops participating in some family activities, out of frustration with their poverty.
  • Coming of Age Story
  • Foot Focus: Esperanza constantly measures age and maturity by people's feet and shoes.
  • Hope Sprouts Eternal: The four skinny trees.
  • Innocent Inaccurate: Esperanza, throughout the entire book
  • Most Writers Are Writers: Writing is Esperanza's means of escape
  • Rape as Drama: Maybe.
    • To clarify: Esperanza is very clearly assaulted at a carnival by some random man, but it's never stated how far it goes. The reader knows that there was some very forceful kissing, but Esperanza doesn't elaborate. Was it too horrific? Did she block it from her memory? We don't know.
  • Slice of Life
  • Tarot Troubles
  • Wrong Side of the Tracks: Esperanza and her family live in the Latino part of Chicago, where most families are poor. She derisively describes how white people who go there are scared of her neighborhood, and she also says that it's scary for her people to go into a wealthy neighborhood.