Youth Quotes in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

How we cite our quotes: (Act.Chapter.Section.Paragraph), (Act.Special Chapter.Paragraph)

Quote #4

We were walking down Main and being stared at by everybody and out of nowhere I said, Karen, I want you to cut my hair. As soon as I said it I knew. The feeling in my blood, the rattle, came over me again. Karen raised her eyebrow: What about your mother? You see, it wasn't just me, everybody was scared of Belicia de León

F*** her, I said.

Karen looked at me like I was being stupid—I never cursed, but that was something else that was about to change. The next day we locked ourselves in her bathroom and downstairs her father and uncles were bellowing at some soccer game. Well, how do you want it? she asked. I looked at the girl in the mirror for a long time. All I knew was that I didn't want to see her ever again. I put the clippers in Karen's hand, turned them on, and guided her hand until it was all gone. (1.2.1.16-1.2.1.18)

All the pangs of adolescence show up this passage. You want anger? Rebellion? Confusion about who you are? Look no further than Wao.

Quote #5

And that's when it hit with the force of a hurricane. The feeling. I stood straight up, the way my mother always wanted me to stand up. My abuela was sitting there, forlorn, trying to cobble together the right words and I could not move or breathe. I felt like I always did at the last seconds of a race, when I was sure that I was going to explode. She was about to say something and I was waiting for whatever she was going to tell me. I was waiting to begin. (1.2.1.103)

Lola calls this "feeling" her "bruja" [witch] feeling. She seems to be following in the footsteps of our narrator, who seems to believe most things relate back to the supernatural. We know Lola and Yunior's relationship didn't work out, but they sure share a strong belief in the fantastic. Lola's restlessness as an adolescent isn't a stage—it's possession by witchy spirits. Freaky. We thought puberty was bad enough…

Quote #6

Our girl had it made, and yet it did not feel so in her heart. For reasons she only dimly understood, by the time of our narrative, Beli could no longer abide working at the bakery or being the "daughter" of one of the "most upstanding women in Baní." She could not abide, period. Everything about her present life irked her; she wanted, with all her heart, something else. (1.3.2.7)

Lola isn't the only one who feels restless during her teenage years. Beli feels that way too. It might be worth asking, however, if this restlessness arises because of Beli or Lola's age, or because of their dissatisfaction with life in the Dominican Republic. Is this dissatisfaction, this restlessness at home, what prompts the Dominican diaspora?