My Name Is Aram
(William Saroyan)
Aram, a rambunctious, irrepressible, nine-year-old boy introduces us to the immigrant Armenian community in the rural Fresno area while leading the reader on adventures and escapades of his daily life. Saroyan burst upon the literary scene with the publication of The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze which brought him instantaneous success in 1934. The stories of Aram Garoghlanian and his wildly memorable extended family appeared first as a series in the Atlantic Monthly. The characters are unforgettable. Zany dialogues and snappy repartee distinguish the characters that populate Saroyan's rural California. His writing stands in stark contrast with his contemporary, John Steinbeck, with it's wacky humor and hilarious solutions for daily dilemmas. Confronting economic hardship, newcomers to America frequently sought manual labor in order to sustain themselves and provide the bare necessities of food and shelter, oftentimes living in crowded conditions with cousins and grandparents under the same roof. Arriving from the old Country, they were accustomed to finding means of survival, taking low-paying jobs in agricultural labor: hoeing fields, picking strawberries and watermelons to scrounge subsistence living. Uncle Jorgi, the zither-player, gets nominated as the fool of the family to be exiled to Hanford for field labor. Unreliable to be entrusted alone in this mission, the family council debates on selecting his companion. Aram is chosen, not for his dexterity for picking watermelons, but for cooking rice which is graded in three catagories: swill, light or salty. His rice is catagorically correct since it is classed by all three descriptions; but he is sent because he is the pest of the family, notorious for playing tricks on the unwary members. Uncle Melik, melancholic for the Old World, saves his hard-earned money to invest it into infertile land. He plants orchards of pomegranates into hard, unyielding soil with the dreams of flowering trees and filling the new country with beauty, but the local inhabitants are unwilling to buy the strange new fruit, finding it a bit too seedy for their tastes. Complications arise when Aram tries to calculate the number of rattlesnakes per acre that populate his uncle's real estate in an effort to deter him from his scheme of planting peaches, figs and pomegranate orchards. Like all ambitious kids, Aram dreams to excel in something. His fantasies take form when he spies an advertisement in Argosy All-Story Magazine for becoming the strongest man in the world. Beguiled by the photograph of Lionel Strongfort, the muscle-bound giant with the greatest chest expansion in the world, he sends the coupon to New York to receive the secrets of Strongfort's success. Frustrated by the financial demands of the training program, he nevertheless pursues his goal on a modified scale. Encouraged by intermittant correspondence from New York and his Uncle Gyko, who had taken up Oriental philosophy and attaining nirvana through the release of mysterious vital forces and vibrating, Aram enters a local race sponsored by Longfellow School. If not the strongest man in the world, he will at least be the champion of the Fifty Yard Dash. Saroyan uses ordinary dreams and goals for witty parables that provide acute insight to human nature. Aram's character is developed through his interaction with his various relatives within the large extended family. The stories reflect the cultural diversity existing in California during the mid-nineteenth century and the daily obstacles that immigrants face. Cousin Arak is a mischievous prankster who systematically disrupts classes and uses methods that routinely leave Aram the victim of teacher-principal punishment. A family cluttered with eccentircs allows no time for boredom as readers explore the daily life and private exploits of Aram's wld where boys go skinny-dipping in irrigation ditches at the first signs of spring.
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