Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The House on Mango Street
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
BookedBeyondMeasure
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Pickpick

Journeying with Esperanza for the year that we get to be with her and her family on Mango Street, is a balm to witness her own coming to herself as she remembers that as much as she wants to leave and never return to this neighborhood, she will return to help the people she has left behind. “They will not know I have gone away to come back. For the ones I left behind. For the ones who cannot out.” She realizes her responsibility to her community.

kspenmoll We are reading this right now in grade 9 English! 🩷 1mo
5 likes1 comment
review
Zuhkeeyah
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

A quick read with a lot of heart folded in. Esperanza speaks of her attempts to make friends, first job, and so much more as she tries to find her bearings as a young teenager.

October #bookspin @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 1mo
22 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
ICantImReading
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

I was surprised by how short this read is, and despite that, these coming-of-age vignettes really pack a punch. The prose is very poetic and there were many beautiful, quotable passages that I wanted to highlight. I can see why Sandra Cisneros is a celebrated Latina author.

48 likes1 stack add
blurb
Susanita
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

Today I finished the last March back issue of Real Simple, as well as this sad and insightful collection of vignettes about a young Hispanic girl in Chicago.

A couple days ago I got a free copy of the April 2024 issue in an attempt to lure me back. Nice try but no.

#readordonate #monthlymagazineblitz

lazydaizee Looks interesting. 9mo
julieclair Congrats on making it through your March magazine stack! And I'm glad you finished your #ReadOrDonate book, too. Was it a good kind of sad, or a depressing kind of sad? 9mo
Susanita @julieclair It‘s well written but TBH I found it a bit depressing. 9mo
julieclair Thanks… good to know. I have heard good things about this book, but I generally shy away from books that are on the depressing side. 9mo
42 likes4 comments
review
freeatlast1137
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

A sometimes heartbreaking story of a girls life growing up on Mango Street.

There are a lot of great one liners in this book. It also at times left you wishing for more information before it went to the next page.

review
Maggie_Reads
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Bailedbailed

That‘s it, I‘m bailing. I don‘t get the point of this book. I like the writing being in vignettes but the characters and stories are not connecting so I‘m having trouble getting into the book. I guess I‘m missing something but I don‘t get the rave reviews. 🤷🏻‍♀️🤔

quote
Booksandtea23
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

quote
Booksandtea23
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

review
Erin.Elizabeth10
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

This is a short book with short little chapters that paint a picture of a girl growing up in a Chicago neighborhood on Mango Street. The vignettes give glimpses into her thoughts, interactions, and desires growing up. At the end, she reflects on her duty to give back to her community when she grows up, because it will always be a part of her. 🧡

blurb
Booksandtea23
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

blurb
Booksandtea23
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

blurb
Booksandtea23
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

🥭

9 likes1 stack add
blurb
Susanita
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

I was mildly annoyed with myself for using Mango Grove for another prompt so recently, but I was actually thinking of Blood Grove. Mango Grove is an Indian restaurant I‘ve been to a couple times with my “lunch lady” friends! Nothing to do with Blood Grove or with Mango Street.

To be fair, Blood Grove refers to a place where blood oranges are grown, but still… 🤦🏻‍♀️

#temptingtitles #withafruit

Eggs Love Cisneros (and mangoes) 🧡🥭💛 2y
32 likes1 comment
blurb
Daisey
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

@vonnie862 This #MugLove23 package is lovely! Thanks so much for putting together a perfectly themed gift! I‘ll be trying the hot chocolate very soon, and I‘m intrigued to try out the wooden whisk. I haven‘t read The House on Mango Street since college, so I‘m also very much looking forward to a reread.

Also, thanks to our hosts for putting together a great swap!

TheKidUpstairs That mug is stunning!!! 2y
vonnie862 Glad you liked it! Here's a video on how to use the whisk: https://youtu.be/xg9RwMfvf-M 2y
Daisey @vonnie862 That is helpful! I was considering trying it tonight, but I have already overindulged on chocolate and sweets today at school. So, I‘m using the jarnito for tea at the moment. 2y
mabell What a cool themed gift! 2y
Cinfhen Cool mug and I agree with @mabell 2y
65 likes1 stack add5 comments
review
GerardtheBookworm
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

A classic piece of Chicana feminist literature written in the 80's, this is inspired by author Sandra Cisnero's own experiences growing up. Set in Chicago in a decaying urbanized dwelling, 12 year old Esperanza Cordero reveals her life of poverty, racism, class structure, sexuality, and cultural identity in a series of vignettes of living on Mango Street.

review
Honeybeebooks
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

I don‘t know how I missed this when it was first published! Sandra Cisneros had me at the introduction of this 25th anniversary edition. Beautifully written, at times funny and poignant, these essays provided a glimpse of a beautiful soul striving to be and be understood. I loved it. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

review
Hooked_on_books
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

Cisneros paints a picture, in short vignettes, of a childhood and a community. She captures both the universality of life and the particularities of the Latinx people inhabiting the stories. I liked this.

49 likes1 stack add
quote
Honeybeebooks
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

“You can never have too much sky. You can fall asleep and wake up drunk on sky,…”

Loving this work by Sandra Cisneros.

quote
britt_brooke
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

“Only a house quiet as snow, a space for myself to go, clean as paper before the poem.”

Deblovestoread Otherwise known as heaven…lol 2y
79 likes3 stack adds2 comments
quote
britt_brooke
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

“The dog is big, like a man dressed in a dog suit, and runs the same way its owner does, clumsy and wild and with the limbs flopping all over the place like untied shoes.”

Karisa Love her descriptions! Haven‘t read that one in ages (college?)—might be time for a revisit! 2y
britt_brooke @Karisa Yes! Do it! Her descriptions are incredible. I‘ll definitely revisit this one in a few years. 2y
63 likes2 comments
review
britt_brooke
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Absolutely stunning collection of vignettes rendering scenes from Esperanza‘s life as she discovers the power of womanhood. This has been on my shelf for ages, and I‘m so grateful my IRL #bookclub got me to finally pick it up. Definitely one of my top reads this year!

rachelk I loved this one too! 2y
Suet624 I haven‘t read this either. Did they make a movie of it? 2y
See All 6 Comments
britt_brooke @Suet624 I‘m not sure. I need to find out! It‘s a lovely book. I have a few passages I need to post. I snapped pics along the way. 2y
Cinfhen Puzzle & book combo = outstanding 🙌🏻 read this book with my son when he was in middle school- he‘s now 27!!!!so a very long time ago. I think i need to reread!!! 2y
britt_brooke @Cinfhen Aw, love that memory! 🤍 2y
105 likes3 stack adds6 comments
blurb
Nutmegnc
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

The author speaking and reading this morning from her new book.

BkClubCare Oh YAY! 🌟 2y
Nutmegnc She was amazing!! 2y
54 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
LeaKell
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Pickpick

This book was like medicine.

LeftyDv Yep. Cough syrupy. 2y
1 like1 comment
review
Robotswithpersonality
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

I love the vignette style of this novella. I was surprised by how visceral the experience was in reading from the perspective of childhood, observing the lives around Esperanza and how often how they are affected by poverty, misogyny, and the displacement of immigration. Given the introduction, in which the author states that she added from her own life experience, now I really want to read the her memoir: A House of My Own. #novella

quote
Robotswithpersonality
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

"...when I am a tiny thing against so many bricks, then it is I look at trees. When there is nothing left to look at on this street. Four who grew despite concrete. Four who reach and do not forget to reach. Four whose only reason is to be and be." [Four Skinny Trees continued]

quote
Robotswithpersonality
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

"Their strength is secret. They send ferocious roots beneath the ground. They grow up and they grow down and grab the earth between their hairy toes and bite the sky with violent teeth and never quit their anger. This is how they keep."

review
CindyMyLifeIsLit
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

I read this for a discussion among teachers. This book is often used in 9th grade English. The vignettes create a strong sense of the culture of her neighborhood and work well for addressing multiculturalism in the classroom, as well as great thematic ideas.

review
cant_i'm_booked
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

I‘ve spent years trying to get into poetry; perhaps this book will finally give me that push. It‘s a moving amalgam of real women‘s stories intersecting on a fictional Chicago city block named Mango Street, riddled with poetic prose like: “…me and Nenny, we are more alike than you would know. Our laughter for example. Not the shy ice cream bells‘ giggle of Rachel and Lucy‘s family, but all of a sudden and surprised like a pile of dishes breaking.”

review
criggs0807
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Pickpick

Short coming a age novel with a big message. Great choice we to tell esperanza's story though a series of vingrettes. It allows you to see how each situation impacts her and shapes her into the person she becomes.

review
JanuarieTimewalker13
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

This book was first published in 1983. The paperback featured is from 1984. I had no idea it was that old.
Only took me 39 years.... this is when I‘m happy I‘ve lived this long. Small book, big message.
Thats my powerful girl, Xena. She‘s nobody‘s fool🐾❤️

review
ravenlee
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

Beautiful little book! I wish I‘d read it years ago but am also kind of glad I never had to read it for school, as I‘m not sure I would have appreciated it as much. The voice reminded me a bit of Angelou in I Know Why…, but was still distinctive. I will definitely be reading this again, and might someday take a stab at the Spanish version (when I dust off my skills some more with kiddo).

megnews I loved this book 3y
kspenmoll Wonderful book! 3y
38 likes2 comments
review
rachelk
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

This highly acclaimed book is written in the form of vignettes from the perspective of a Mexican American girl in a Hispanic neighborhood, which I believe was loosely based on the real life of Cisneros. I can see why it has been studied over the years by people of all ages. Since it can be read in one sitting, there‘s really no reason not to.

50 likes2 stack adds
review
MegCaldwell
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

This was my first time reading and I can‘t believe it took me so long to read it! I love love loved the style, the voice, and the way the neighborhood becomes something else but stays a neighborhood.

Nute A favorite book of mine.🙂 3y
9 likes1 comment
review
PMMREADS
post image
Pickpick


“She thinks people who are busy working for a living deserve beautiful little stories, because they don‘t have much time and are often tired.”

review
mushroomszn
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

this book was really short but sooo good. i had to read it for school but i really recommend it.

review
IselaKay
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

3️⃣
Finished! 3rd book for my Mexican American Literature class.

This is the 4th time I read this book & I like it more each time.

Sandra Cisneros captures the feeling of loving a culture you sometimes don‘t feel apart of or understand. Of daring to want something better and moving past the resentment of your situation—instead, replacing it with a drive to overcome and help others to do the same. Esperanza is so many young Hispanic Americans.

quote
AliceFaustus
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

...grew despite concrete...

review
LeeAntics
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Pickpick

This book is a “must have” for every First generation/Late generation American Latinos. To read the anecdotes that detail the loss of our mother tongue, the barriers of femininity and the flourishing of womanhood, along with the dual identity of poverty and humility, this book had me wanting more. Painting love languages of coming of age with the harsh reality many young girls and women face.

megnews I loved this. 3y
6 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
kbuggle
House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

Catching up on some reading for work- this is a lovely book- writing is right on, and I read this in about one sitting.

review
Rachiiebookdragon
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
Pickpick

A intriguing book. 3.5/5
Read for the #Buzzwordathon - May is House or Home

I had this book on my TBR for ages so i‘m glad I finished got to it! 😊

blurb
Larisssaa
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros

04/23/21
When she thinks to herself in her father Language, she knows sons and daughters don't leave their parents' house until they marry. When she thinks in English, she knows she should've been on her own since eighteen.
This can be relatable for many young adults when it comes to the stressful judgment point of the age to be left on your own. Many places have different cultures on this act, while others let you be.

review
Allthebookclubs
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

When I picked up this book last month I didn‘t realize it wasn‘t a novel, so I‘m glad I read reviewed before starting it. The writing was wonderful and I‘m glad for the real, although it was a pretty quick read. Book 11of 2021

review
Soubhiville
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Mehso-so

This is a very fast read, written in mostly one or two page vignettes. My favorite was about a neighbor giving three pairs of heels to three little girls and the fun they had trying them on and learning to walk in them, then realizing men were looking at them differently and abandoning the shoes.

Read for #Illinois #ReadTheStates2021

Lindy I read The House on Mango Street years ago and it left a deep, positive impression on me. The reason I love novels told in stories or, as in this case, vignettes, is because of the way a multifaceted texture develops. The place is vivid in my mind. Have you enjoyed other books where the setting is so important to the story? 4y
Soubhiville @Lindy I do love novels with a strong sense of place. Short stories are hard for me to connect with though. 4y
Soubhiville @Lindy there are definitely exceptions though... I loved Lauren Groff‘s Florida. Which definitely has the spirit of the land almost as a character. 4y
See All 7 Comments
Lindy @Soubhiville I think of novels-told-in-stories as a good entry point for readers who don‘t usually like short stories. You are proof that I am wrong. 🤗 4y
Lindy @Soubhiville I‘ve been meaning to read Florida for ages. Must get to it one of these days. 😊 4y
Soubhiville @Lindy I also really liked There There by Tommy Orange and Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi, which I think of in kind of the same vein? Maybe I didn‘t love Mango Street because of the YA lean? Or it could just be a case of reading it at the wrong time. I might love it at another point in my life. 🤷‍♀️ 4y
Lindy @Soubhiville Yes, right book at the wrong time is definitely a possibility. Our brains are funny that way. 4y
65 likes7 comments
review
CoveredInRust
post image
Pickpick

I've always enjoyed Cisneros's poetry and also enjoyed this book. It's made of vignettes rather than a typical narrative and shiwcases an interesting blend of poetry and prose styles.

readordierachel Love this book! 4y
CoveredInRust @readordierachel I definitely can't wait to read more from her! 4y
34 likes2 comments
blurb
brandierickson
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image

Trying to potty train the toddler and it is NOT going well. So I‘m going to read this book and try not to be frustrated.

BookishMarginalia May the force be with you! 4y
13 likes1 comment
review
Adventures_of_a_French_Reader
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Mehso-so

In December, I finally read this book that I wanted to read for a long time.

In small vignettes, we discover the life of Esperanza on Mango Street in Chicago.

No book crush for me, even if I enjoyed the ride. I really liked how Sandra Cisneros gave life and a voice to Mango Street, and its inhabitants. However, I know that it won't be a memorable read for me, the characters won't leave any imprint, it will just fade away.

review
dearb00kshelves
The House on Mango Street | Sandra Cisneros
post image
Pickpick

This collection of vingettes following a young girl growing up on Mango Street is beautifully written and gives small glimpses of a childhood that is often joyful but sometimes scary or sad. I missed out on reading this in school and I'm glad I could pick it up now. I also just wanted to say Caramelo my Cisneros is AMAZING so pick that up too! #youngadult #ya #shortstories