For class Thursday we'll be reading two short stories by Randa Jarrar: "Lost in Freakin' Yonkers" and "A Frame for the Sky."
Before we meet, I'd like you to post your thoughts on these shorts stories regarding anything from point of view and theme to the structure of the plot (exposition, complication, crisis, resolution).
How would you compare her work to other prose we've read this semester?
I had a tough time deciding between "Lost in Freakin' Yonkers" and "A Frame for the Sky" for my critical response essay. I enjoyed the stories so much and had a great time analyzing them that I reread them several times. Jarrar's writing is very different from the other works we've read in that she is very blunt, to the point, aggressive in her writing, and she doesn't shy away from using vulgar language to color her characters.
"A Frame for the Sky" is about a Palestinian Muslim that must learn to deal with change, as it is an integral part of his life. I think the story is very exemplary of conditions many Palestinians undergo (constant displacement, bloodshed, etc). The story plays with different themes, such as loneliness, questions of identity, and differences in the Arab and American cultures. I especially enjoyed the similarities I found in his character and many Arab parents I know. The generation gap between Arab immigrants and their first-generation American-born children is often stark, and Jarrar portrays this conflict in a way her readers can relate.
"Lost in Freakin' Yonkers" was a fun read. It was such a real story of how Arab Muslim families react to such situations. It was especially interesting because I felt I knew the narrator..I know an Arab Muslim, that as a teenager, got pregnant by her abusive African-American boyfriend, ran away from home, was disowned by her parents, etc. The similarities to her experiences and the ones of the narrator were shocking. But it made the story that much more real.