The significance of Ernesto Galarza's memoir taking place in California in the story is that the story tells of a Mexican boy beginning school without knowing the language or culture of the place.
The boy was an immigrant who has not inkling of what he will face as he begins his life journey in California.
Throughout the memoir, he struggles with his identity after moving countries and trying to fit in. He doesn’t include a name in his title because that reflects his own personal feelings of having no identity. He isn’t even sure of who he is, and so he presents that to the reader by the title of his memoir.
You get the Just and you should reword a few things and maybe add a short example from the book into that and then the answer should be fine
These lines signify the victory in the civil war of the Union.
Explanation:
These lines by Walt Whitman were eulogizing Abraham Lincoln after his death.
These lines start by relating that the battle that they were fighting in his leadership is now won,
The battle here is the civil war.
This is described by the narrative strategy of metaphor in which the ship is the Union force and the sea is the war and the war was now won but the captain of the ship who is supposed to be Lincoln is no longer there so the victory does not seem to him complete.
Answer:
what separates the narrator and his father from other people in his village
Explanation:
Hope is the simplest answer. New beginnings is another option.