week to buy bags of fresh fruits and vegetables, and then bikes
home to share them with his
neighbors. He keeps a small patch of strawberries and an apricot tree. When the fruit is ripe, he opens
his gate and invites all the children in to pick and eat. He is
Ye-Ye to every child in the neighborhood.
I had always thought that I was sensible and self-aware. But nothing has made me stare as hard in
the mirror as I did after learning about the cruel past that
Ye-Ye had suffered and the cheerful attitude
he had kept throughout those years. I thought back to all the times when I had gotten upset. My mom
forgot to pick me up from the bus station. My computer crashed the day before an assignment was
due. They seemed so trivial and childish, and I felt deeply ashamed of myself.
Now, whenever I encounter an obstacle that seems overwhelming, I think of
Ye-Ye; I see him in his
red baseball cap, smiling at me. Like a splash of cool water, his smile rouses me from grief, and
reminds me how trivial my worries are and how generous life has been. Today I keep a red baseball
cap at the railing post at home where
Ye-Ye used to put his every night. Whenever I see the cap, I think
of my
Ye-Ye, smiling in his red baseball cap, and I smile. Yes,
Ye-Ye. Life is a blessing.
REVIEW
Yueming quickly distinguishes herself with her refreshingly crisp writing. Avoiding a common pitfall
in college application essays, Yueming uses the appropriate amount of descriptive
language needed to
illustrate her thoughts while keeping her prose clean and readable. She doesn’t just use big words for
the sake of using big words—a pitfall that many are aware of yet many still succumb.
In fact, her succinctness helps her essay shine. For example, the stark simplicity of the line “Eight
years later,
Ye-Ye walked alone—his brother was dead” makes it especially powerful. The sentence’s
abruptness hits the reader with the full force of the situation, unmitigated by secondary details. The
terse, in-passing reference to
Ye-Ye’s brother ’s death in itself is haunting, conveying a sense of
coldness in the world that suits Yueming’s intent perfectly.
Fundamentally, this reflects the underlying strength of this essay: Yueming’s remarkable ability to
tell a story. Her concise writing style lends itself well to this art, crafting a narrative that is evocative
but easy to follow.
Like many good storytellers, Yueming weaves recurring themes into her work,
giving it a sense of unity. In particular, there is a persistent spark of optimism that her grandfather
retains in the face of tremendous hardship, captured in the refrain, “Life was a blessing.” It echoes
throughout the piece, embodying the larger perspective of gratitude that Yueming credits to her
grandfather. Inevitably, though, the heavy focus on her grandfather does
come at the expense of her
own story, as her role as an individual in the essay feels rather minor. As such, the reader doesn’t
learn enough about Yueming herself. Though she tells a compelling story, the reader comes away
with a better understanding of
Ye-Ye as a person than of Yueming.
But in spite of this flaw, the essay works. Yueming comes across as a compassionate individual
with a talent for storytelling.
—Victor C. Wu