Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little one. The arms of the mother are personified an indication of the conflict that Lae Choo faced of being accepted into the new way of life and remembering how life in China felt like. She “sank to the floor with anguish as “dinner remained on the table” (170). Her hungry arms exhibit the first image and intensify the pain of her. Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little one. The arms of the mother are personified an indication of the conflict that Lae Choo faced of being accepted into the new way of life and remembering how life in China felt like. She “sank to the floor with anguish as “dinner remained on the table” (170). Her hungry arms exhibit the first image and intensify the pain of her. Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little
Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little one. The arms of the mother are personified an indication of the conflict that Lae Choo faced of being accepted into the new way of life and remembering how life in China felt like. She “sank to the floor with anguish as “dinner remained on the table” (170). Her hungry arms exhibit the first image and intensify the pain of her. Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little one. The arms of the mother are personified an indication of the conflict that Lae Choo faced of being accepted into the new way of life and remembering how life in China felt like. She “sank to the floor with anguish as “dinner remained on the table” (170). Her hungry arms exhibit the first image and intensify the pain of her. Her arms are aching with the hunger to embrace her son. Equally, she does not eat any food from the degree of grief she feels when her husband comes home without her little