The Tortilla Curtain Analysis

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The yearning for wealth, the desire to be successful, and the wish to have it all: the epitome of the American dream. This never-ending dream is the “just what the doctor ordered” lifestyle that people ultimately strive to attain. In the novel, The Tortilla Curtain by T.C. Boyle, two couples from two very different worlds are forced together by a series of unfortunate events. Cándidó and América Rincón, illegal immigrants from Mexico struggling to achieve basic freedoms, have their disheartening stories paralleled with the Mossbacher's, Delaney and Kyra, a white couple living in the suburbs of Los Angeles who seem to have it all. From the perspective of each character, the reader receives a front row seat into their lives and what they had to do in order to get where they are now. In the novel, The Tortilla Curtain, the image of the American dream differs greatly between the Mossbachers and the Rincón, suggesting that for citizens the American dream is more superficial, and for immigrants it is about basic necessity. Second chances may or may not always bring about great opportunities. Cándidó, an illegal immigrant with a strong sense of the faultless lifestyle he constantly lusts for, gives migrating with his wife to the freedom land another chance. Because the couple are so unsatisfied and unsure about the minimal opportunities that Mexico once offered them, Cándidó and América anticipate that their new “home” in the states will provide “a house, a yard, maybe a TV and a car too,” (Boyle 29). These materialistic things may seem to be such basic, yet selfish resources, but to Cándidó and his wife, they are a way for the refugees to feel like they belong within such a pressured society. América, an optimistic dreamer influence... ... middle of paper ... ...o please society and the many stresses that higher-class individuals place upon one another. As you can see, T.C. Boyle’s The Tortilla Curtain introduces us to two completely opposite couples whose backgrounds correspond with their different beliefs and values of what the overly sought out American dream is. While immigrants seek out basic necessities in order to thrive and survive in America, many citizens to the states live overly shallow and superficial lifestyles, where what they already have never truly satisfies them. Both the Rincóns and the Mossbachers have their own image of the American dream and eventually realize that their dreams were nothing but false impressions. Delaney and Kyra Mossbacher are an unpleasant illustration of the American Dream, whereas Cándidó and América Rincón are a tragic example of how people struggle to gain that ultimate dream.

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