Jeanne Marie Laskas's Hecho En Venus

Improved Essays
Jeanne Marie Laskas is the author of the article, “Hecho en América.” In this article, she experiences life in the world of migrant workers who pick blueberries in Washington County, Maine. Jeanne Marie Laskas reveals the differences between the worlds and lives of those who pick the berries and those who eat them. The story ran in September 2011 on GQ.com.
Furthermore, it requires a lot of effort to include a personal anecdote in third- person into an article to create foreshadowing and curiousness. Jeanne Marie Laskas does it so smoothly that it almost seems as if you are in story, as you read it. She creates a great amount of imagery and allows you to undergo the situation with her in “Hecho en América.” She understands that the facts that the main characters of the story are actually the reality of the lives of the migrant workers.
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She has a certain length for each sentence. Also, the author gives the reader breathing room and time to pause. What is breathing room? The following quote from “Hecho en América, “represents how the author uses dashes to give the reader breaks in sentences. “Without 1 million people on the ground on ladders, in bushes—armies of pickers swooping in like bees—all the tilling, planting, and fertilizing of America’s $144 billion horticultural production is for naught. The fruit falls to the ground and rots.” The reader can take a pause. This allows the reader to correctly comprehend the message the author is

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