In The Plum Plum Pickers one of the recurring themes seems to be the
association of children with plants.
On page 63, Lupe is looking at one of her avocado plants, thinking,
“Like herself. Another child. A child of the Earth. An Earthling. This treelet would ever reach maturity. She knew that. She’d lost too many others. It would never bear fruit.” And on page 64, “so much like small
children, those little plants.” Lupe
has a very strong concept of how much her family’s livelihood relies on the
crops, and I think that fuels her association. There is also the aspect of a person living off the
Earth. It seems unnatural to her
on some level that you can pick fruit for a living and still struggle to feed
your family. This is emphasized by
the fact that she cannot sustain her own plants enough to grow food.
Avocados in particular are
important to Lupe. They are
something she associates with her home in Mexico and the greater fertility she
knew there. She even describes a
pregnant woman as being like an avocado.
There is even a later, less direct
reference to this mindset. In a
later scene, on page 97, she has lost her children, and fears that they’ve been
run over by a tractor. Out of the
context of the rest of the novel, it wouldn’t seem like much, but there’s
something to be said for the fact that she is digging in the dirt for her
children, like they returned to the ground they sprouted from.
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