The Dreamer By Junot Diaz Summary

Words: 673
Pages: 3

Life in the Third World-country was no picnic. I can’t imagine being a child and not being able to go to school, but to only work on a farm from dawn to dusk. Having dreams of becoming someone or something great, for it to be rip from you by threats and with beatings if you’re caught anywhere near a school yard by your own mother. In “The Dreamer,” by Junot Diaz, a young girl is face with adversity when trying to go to school so that she can reach her dream in becoming a nurse.
Born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Junot Diaz is a well-known writer who immigrated to New Jersey with his family in 1975. In the essay Diaz depicts a time in his mother’s life where she was faced with her mother not allowing her to go to school. But overtime life changed
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When reading this essay you can take a lot from it; bravery, determination and ambition. As they can see that even though his mother was scared, she did what she had to do in order to go to school. “Two days before the move, she got down on her knees beside a stagnant puddle of water, put her mouth in it and drank deeply” (129). This causing herself to get sick but cleverly making her way down to the school once she was well. Then her rebelling against her mother when it came time for her to go back home. “And when she tried to drag my mother up the hill, the police put her in handcuffs, and that was that” (130). In the end even though things didn’t turn out the way she wanted them to she never gave up, and as she got older she encouraged her son to do the same. The message that Diaz is giving to the readers is to never give up. Never give up on your dreams, even if there are obstacles or distractions in your way just keep pushing forward. Diaz admired his mother and his mother’s determination influenced his life