

Beloved: Pulitzer Prize Winner (Vintage International) [Toni Morrison] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Beloved: Pulitzer Prize Winner (Vintage International) Review: Difficult, But a Must-Read - This novel was rated by the New York Times as the best American novel of the last 25 years and has been accorded the status of a classic great American novel. This amount of hype, Morrison's iconic status, and the difficulty of the book can cause a great amount of skepticism in the reader. One wants to hate the book and toss it aside. It took me quite a while to warm to the book, and I did almost toss it aside at points. It is not an easy read. Morrison could have structured her narrative in a more readable way, but she deliberately chose not to. The story of the runaway slave-mother's tragic loss of her daughter is too painful to be told in this fashion. So it's done episodically, with flashbacks, and with the device of the sudden appearance of a stray girl who is taken in as a new daughter with growing suspicions as to her being a reincarnation. There are very good reasons for Morrison to tell the tale in this fashion. The events of the slave era, after all, exist only in racial memory, and a 21st century reader can best approach the horrors of the times by peeling back the layers of memory. This is exactly how Morrison tells her story, and it does resonate. Also, it is apparent that Morrison is skilled in the oral traditions of a culture that didn't tell legends in a linear manner. So, the reader has to put aside his/her frustrations with the difficulty of this approach and appreciate the writer's need to tell the tale in this fashion. And it helps that the story becomes a lot clearer as you slog through the narrative. Morrison's language is quite remarkable. It is at times poetic. She can capture the character and look of a person in a few striking sentences. It's really some of the best writing I've read for some time. So, the book does live up to the hype. It's a classic work that has to be re-read and that probably has to be studied in a literature class to appreciate fully. I heard one critic say that this was the book he'd bring to a desert island. No way. It's not the kind of book one falls in love with. And for me, I connect better emotionally with Banks' and Oates' novels as well as O'Brien's "The Things They Carried." I'd probably rate those books as better than Morrison's in a contest to name the best American work of fiction over the past 25 years. Still, some of Morrison's characters, particularly "Paul D", are unforgettable and quite attractive. But in the end, I can't fall in love with this book any more than I could fall in love with "Ulysses." The book is a must-read for those wanting to be literate in recent American fiction. Review: I Love Toni Morrison! - Beloved by Toni Morrison “Something that is loved is never lost.” ― Toni Morrison, Beloved In observation of Banned Books Week 2023, I decided to treat myself and reread Beloved by my favorite author, Toni Morrison. In 1988, Beloved received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, as well as the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Book Award, the Melcher Book Award, the Lyndhurst Foundation Award, and the Elmer Holmes Bobst Award. When the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to Toni Morrison in 1993, it was said that her novels were characterized by " visionary force and poetic import” and that she “gives life to an essential aspect of American reality." In 2006, a survey of writers and literary critics compiled by The New York Times ranked Beloved as the best work of American fiction from 1981 to 2006. Toni Morrison’s Beloved has been the object of challenges in school districts and public library systems across the country. For instance, in 2022, the Protect Nebraska Children Coalition brought an extensive list of books to the Wauneta-Pallisade (NE) Public Schools board meeting and wanted the books removed from both the elementary and high school libraries. This list of more than 30 titles includes Beloved. All books were subsequently removed for evaluation. In 2016, Beloved was challenged but retained as an optional summer reading choice in the Satellite Beach (FL) High School Advanced Placement classes. A parent admitted that he had not read the entire book when he addressed the committee, but wanted the book banned because of what he called “porn content.” In 2013, Beloved was challenged but retained as a text in Salem (MI) High School Advanced Placement English courses. The complainants cited the allegedly obscene nature of some passages in the book and asked that it be removed from the curriculum. District officials determined the novel was appropriate for the age and maturity level of Advanced Placement students. In reviewing the novel, the committee also considered the accuracy of the material, the objectivity of the material, and the necessity of using the material in light of the curriculum. Scholars say one of the reasons Toni Morrison’s books are controversial is because they address dark moments in American history that can be uncomfortable to talk about for some people. Beloved, for example, was inspired by The Margaret Garner Incident of 1856. Margaret Garner was born into slavery on June 4, 1834, on Maplewood Plantation in Boone County, Kentucky. Working as a house slave for much of her life, Garner often traveled with her masters and even accompanied them on shopping trips to free territories in Cincinnati, Ohio. After marrying Robert Garner in 1849, Margaret bore four children by 1856. At this time, the Underground Railroad was at its height in and around Cincinnati, transporting numerous slaves to freedom in Canada. The Garners decided to take advantage of such an opportunity to escape enslavement. On Sunday January 27, 1856, they set out for their first stop on their route to freedom, Joseph Kite’s house in Cincinnati. The Garners made it safely to Kite’s home on Monday morning, where they awaited their next guide. Within hours, the Garners’ master, A.K. Gaines, and Federal marshals stormed Kite’s home with warrants for the Garners. Determined not to return to slavery, Margaret decided to take the lives of herself and her children. When the marshals found Margaret in a back room, she had slit her two-year-old daughter’s throat with a butcher knife, killing her. The other children lay on the floor wounded but still alive. The Garners were taken into custody and tried in what became one of the longest fugitive slave trials in history. During the two-week trial, abolitionist and lawyer, John Jolliffe, argued that Margaret’s trips to free territory in Cincinnati entitled her and her children to freedom. Although Jolliffe provided compelling arguments, the judge denied the Garners’ plea for freedom and returned them to Gaines. He relocated the Garners to several different plantations before finally selling them to his brother in Arkansas. Emily Knox, author of Book Banning in 21st-Century America, states of Toni Morrison’s body of work, that: “What she tried to do is convey the trauma of the legacy of slavery to her readers. That is a violent legacy. Her books do not sugarcoat or use euphemisms. And that is actually what people have trouble with.” Dana A. Williams, President of the Toni Morrison Society and Dean of Howard University’s graduate school says: “Toni Morrison’s books tend to be targeted because she is unrelenting in her belief that the very particular experiences of Black people are incredibly universal. Blackness is the center of the universe for her and for her readers, or for her imagined reader. And that is inappropriate or inadequate or unreasonable or unimaginable for some people.” Toni Morrison often spoke out against censorship, both of her work and more broadly. Her comments in the introduction of Burn This Book, a 2009 anthology of essays she edited on censorship issues, are especially appropriate for today. “The thought that leads me to contemplate with dread the erasure of other voices, of unwritten novels, poems whispered or swallowed for fear of being overheard by the wrong people, outlawed languages flourishing underground, essayists questions challenging authority never being posed, unstaged plays, canceled films—that thought is a nightmare. As though a whole universe is being described in invisible ink.” In September 2022, as part of New York Public Library’s Banned Books Week celebration, the NYPL honored Toni Morrison. Her words printed below are engraved on one of its walls at its flagship location on 42nd Street. Access to knowledge is the superb, the supreme act of truly great civilizations. Of all the institutions that purport to do this, free libraries stand virtually alone in accomplishing this mission. No committee decides who may enter, no crisis of body or spirit must accompany the entrant. No tuition is charged, no oath sworn, no visa demanded. Of the monuments humans build for themselves, very few say 'touch me, use me, my hush is not indifference, my space is not a barrier.' If I inspire awe, it is because I am in awe of you and the possibilities that dwell in you. Resources Toni Morrison on writing 'Beloved' (1987 interview) Toni Morrison talks to Peter Florence Toni Morrison on Beloved | Hay Festival Why should you read Toni Morrison’s “Beloved”? - Yen Pham "Beloved" - Banned Books Week 2021 Readout: Beloved - Banned Books Week 2020 Banned Books Conversations - Beloved by Toni Morrison

| Best Sellers Rank | #739 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #8 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #29 in Coming of Age Fiction (Books) #78 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (19,712) |
| Dimensions | 5.15 x 0.8 x 7.95 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 1400033411 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1400033416 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 321 pages |
| Publication date | June 8, 2004 |
| Publisher | Vintage |
| Reading age | 1 year and up |
C**A
Difficult, But a Must-Read
This novel was rated by the New York Times as the best American novel of the last 25 years and has been accorded the status of a classic great American novel. This amount of hype, Morrison's iconic status, and the difficulty of the book can cause a great amount of skepticism in the reader. One wants to hate the book and toss it aside. It took me quite a while to warm to the book, and I did almost toss it aside at points. It is not an easy read. Morrison could have structured her narrative in a more readable way, but she deliberately chose not to. The story of the runaway slave-mother's tragic loss of her daughter is too painful to be told in this fashion. So it's done episodically, with flashbacks, and with the device of the sudden appearance of a stray girl who is taken in as a new daughter with growing suspicions as to her being a reincarnation. There are very good reasons for Morrison to tell the tale in this fashion. The events of the slave era, after all, exist only in racial memory, and a 21st century reader can best approach the horrors of the times by peeling back the layers of memory. This is exactly how Morrison tells her story, and it does resonate. Also, it is apparent that Morrison is skilled in the oral traditions of a culture that didn't tell legends in a linear manner. So, the reader has to put aside his/her frustrations with the difficulty of this approach and appreciate the writer's need to tell the tale in this fashion. And it helps that the story becomes a lot clearer as you slog through the narrative. Morrison's language is quite remarkable. It is at times poetic. She can capture the character and look of a person in a few striking sentences. It's really some of the best writing I've read for some time. So, the book does live up to the hype. It's a classic work that has to be re-read and that probably has to be studied in a literature class to appreciate fully. I heard one critic say that this was the book he'd bring to a desert island. No way. It's not the kind of book one falls in love with. And for me, I connect better emotionally with Banks' and Oates' novels as well as O'Brien's "The Things They Carried." I'd probably rate those books as better than Morrison's in a contest to name the best American work of fiction over the past 25 years. Still, some of Morrison's characters, particularly "Paul D", are unforgettable and quite attractive. But in the end, I can't fall in love with this book any more than I could fall in love with "Ulysses." The book is a must-read for those wanting to be literate in recent American fiction.
N**G
I Love Toni Morrison!
Beloved by Toni Morrison “Something that is loved is never lost.” ― Toni Morrison, Beloved In observation of Banned Books Week 2023, I decided to treat myself and reread Beloved by my favorite author, Toni Morrison. In 1988, Beloved received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, as well as the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Book Award, the Melcher Book Award, the Lyndhurst Foundation Award, and the Elmer Holmes Bobst Award. When the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to Toni Morrison in 1993, it was said that her novels were characterized by " visionary force and poetic import” and that she “gives life to an essential aspect of American reality." In 2006, a survey of writers and literary critics compiled by The New York Times ranked Beloved as the best work of American fiction from 1981 to 2006. Toni Morrison’s Beloved has been the object of challenges in school districts and public library systems across the country. For instance, in 2022, the Protect Nebraska Children Coalition brought an extensive list of books to the Wauneta-Pallisade (NE) Public Schools board meeting and wanted the books removed from both the elementary and high school libraries. This list of more than 30 titles includes Beloved. All books were subsequently removed for evaluation. In 2016, Beloved was challenged but retained as an optional summer reading choice in the Satellite Beach (FL) High School Advanced Placement classes. A parent admitted that he had not read the entire book when he addressed the committee, but wanted the book banned because of what he called “porn content.” In 2013, Beloved was challenged but retained as a text in Salem (MI) High School Advanced Placement English courses. The complainants cited the allegedly obscene nature of some passages in the book and asked that it be removed from the curriculum. District officials determined the novel was appropriate for the age and maturity level of Advanced Placement students. In reviewing the novel, the committee also considered the accuracy of the material, the objectivity of the material, and the necessity of using the material in light of the curriculum. Scholars say one of the reasons Toni Morrison’s books are controversial is because they address dark moments in American history that can be uncomfortable to talk about for some people. Beloved, for example, was inspired by The Margaret Garner Incident of 1856. Margaret Garner was born into slavery on June 4, 1834, on Maplewood Plantation in Boone County, Kentucky. Working as a house slave for much of her life, Garner often traveled with her masters and even accompanied them on shopping trips to free territories in Cincinnati, Ohio. After marrying Robert Garner in 1849, Margaret bore four children by 1856. At this time, the Underground Railroad was at its height in and around Cincinnati, transporting numerous slaves to freedom in Canada. The Garners decided to take advantage of such an opportunity to escape enslavement. On Sunday January 27, 1856, they set out for their first stop on their route to freedom, Joseph Kite’s house in Cincinnati. The Garners made it safely to Kite’s home on Monday morning, where they awaited their next guide. Within hours, the Garners’ master, A.K. Gaines, and Federal marshals stormed Kite’s home with warrants for the Garners. Determined not to return to slavery, Margaret decided to take the lives of herself and her children. When the marshals found Margaret in a back room, she had slit her two-year-old daughter’s throat with a butcher knife, killing her. The other children lay on the floor wounded but still alive. The Garners were taken into custody and tried in what became one of the longest fugitive slave trials in history. During the two-week trial, abolitionist and lawyer, John Jolliffe, argued that Margaret’s trips to free territory in Cincinnati entitled her and her children to freedom. Although Jolliffe provided compelling arguments, the judge denied the Garners’ plea for freedom and returned them to Gaines. He relocated the Garners to several different plantations before finally selling them to his brother in Arkansas. Emily Knox, author of Book Banning in 21st-Century America, states of Toni Morrison’s body of work, that: “What she tried to do is convey the trauma of the legacy of slavery to her readers. That is a violent legacy. Her books do not sugarcoat or use euphemisms. And that is actually what people have trouble with.” Dana A. Williams, President of the Toni Morrison Society and Dean of Howard University’s graduate school says: “Toni Morrison’s books tend to be targeted because she is unrelenting in her belief that the very particular experiences of Black people are incredibly universal. Blackness is the center of the universe for her and for her readers, or for her imagined reader. And that is inappropriate or inadequate or unreasonable or unimaginable for some people.” Toni Morrison often spoke out against censorship, both of her work and more broadly. Her comments in the introduction of Burn This Book, a 2009 anthology of essays she edited on censorship issues, are especially appropriate for today. “The thought that leads me to contemplate with dread the erasure of other voices, of unwritten novels, poems whispered or swallowed for fear of being overheard by the wrong people, outlawed languages flourishing underground, essayists questions challenging authority never being posed, unstaged plays, canceled films—that thought is a nightmare. As though a whole universe is being described in invisible ink.” In September 2022, as part of New York Public Library’s Banned Books Week celebration, the NYPL honored Toni Morrison. Her words printed below are engraved on one of its walls at its flagship location on 42nd Street. Access to knowledge is the superb, the supreme act of truly great civilizations. Of all the institutions that purport to do this, free libraries stand virtually alone in accomplishing this mission. No committee decides who may enter, no crisis of body or spirit must accompany the entrant. No tuition is charged, no oath sworn, no visa demanded. Of the monuments humans build for themselves, very few say 'touch me, use me, my hush is not indifference, my space is not a barrier.' If I inspire awe, it is because I am in awe of you and the possibilities that dwell in you. Resources Toni Morrison on writing 'Beloved' (1987 interview) Toni Morrison talks to Peter Florence Toni Morrison on Beloved | Hay Festival Why should you read Toni Morrison’s “Beloved”? - Yen Pham "Beloved" - Banned Books Week 2021 Readout: Beloved - Banned Books Week 2020 Banned Books Conversations - Beloved by Toni Morrison
A**A
Excellent Piece of Literature
I am excited to have my own copy of this to re-read for college, having previously studied it during high school. Beloved is an intense, non-linear story that I ended up adoring thanks in much part to my AP Lang teacher’s guidance, and I am not sure I would have understood things nearly as well without her. The book arrived quickly and in good condition. Beloved addressed sensitive topics as part of its narrative, so be cognizant and do some research before reading if you are not familiar with the nature of the text
B**S
Condition not great when delivered
5 stars for the story 3 stars for the condition it was in Book came in a little beat up in one piece. Loved the story all the way through. Parts are shocking and hard to read without feeling discomfort but all contributed to how well it was written.
R**I
Good
L**A
Wow this is a must read… a masterpiece!
W**E
Interessiert man sich für weibliche, afroamerikanische Literatur, kommt man an Toni Morrison nicht vorbei. 1993 erhielt sie als erste schwarze Frau den Literaturnobelpreis. Bereits fünf Jahre zuvor wurde ihr Roman „Beloved“, in dem sie sich mit der Geschichte der Sklaverei in den USA auseinandersetzt, mit dem Pulitzer-Preis ausgezeichnet. Das Buch basiert lose auf der Biografie von Margaret Garner, die 1856 ihre zweijährige Tochter tötete, um sie vor einem Leben in Sklaverei zu bewahren. Ich habe lange gebraucht, bis ich bereit für „Beloved“ war. Tatsächlich begann ich das Buch schon einmal, bemerkte aber, dass ich mit dem Schreibstil noch nicht zurechtkam und stellte es zurück ins Regal. Drei Jahre wartete es geduldig auf mich. 18 Jahre ist es her, dass Sethe eine Sklavin in Sweet Home war. Unaussprechliches wurde ihr angetan, bis sie, hochschwanger und allein, floh. Zu Fuß schlug sie sich nach Ohio durch, wo sie im Haus ihrer Schwiegermutter Baby Suggs unterkam. Heute ist die 124 ihr Heim, in dem sie mit ihrer Tochter Denver lebt. Freiheit ist jedoch mehr als ein physischer Zustand. Noch immer wird Sethe von ihren Erinnerungen heimgesucht. In ihrem Haus spukt der Geist ihres Babys, auf dessen Grabstein ein einziges Wort eingraviert ist: Beloved. Als ein Besucher aus ihrer Vergangenheit eines Tages auf der Schwelle der 124 auf Sethe wartet, scheint es, als erhielte sie erstmals eine Chance auf wahres Glück. Doch diese Hoffnung währt nur einige Herzschläge, denn kurz darauf tritt eine junge Frau in ihr Leben, die Sethes Glauben, ihre Mutterliebe und ihr Verständnis von Freiheit hart auf die Probe stellt. Sie sagt, sie heißt Beloved… Wie könnte ich für dieses preisgekrönte Buch weniger als fünf Sterne vergeben? „Beloved“ ist ein moderner Klassiker, der das vor allem in den USA ungeliebte Thema der Sklaverei psychologisch vielschichtig und glaubwürdig bespricht. Erstaunlicherweise halte ich den Roman trotz dessen nicht für eine Abhandlung über Sklaverei. Meiner Meinung nach ist es eine Geschichte darüber, was Freiheit bedeutet, speziell für farbige Frauen. Laut Vorwort entspricht dieser Eindruck auch Toni Morrisons Intention. Die Handlung spielt vermutlich zwischen 1865 und 1890, nach dem amerikanischen Sezessionskrieg und der offiziellen Abschaffung der Sklaverei. Im Mittelpunkt stehen Vergangenheit und Gegenwart der Protagonistin Sethe, die untrennbar miteinander verwoben sind. Sethe lebte viele Jahre als Sklavin auf der Farm Sweet Home in Kentucky, bis sie die Qualen unter ihren weißen Herren nicht mehr aushielt und den gefährlichen Entschluss traf, zu fliehen. Ich war sehr dankbar, dass Sethes Sklavenzeit zur Gegenwart des Buches bereits knapp 20 Jahre zurückliegt. Dadurch erlebte ich ihr Leid mit einem gewissen Abstand und war nicht gezwungen, die furchtbaren Torturen, die ihr angetan wurden, live zu beobachten. Ich will damit nicht ausdrücken, dass ich die Augen vor der Realität verschließe, doch die menschenunwürdigen Methoden der Sklavenhalter in Sweet Home waren selbst als Rückblenden äußerst schwer zu ertragen. Sethes Rücken ist von Narben entstellt, die Zeugnis vom brutalen, rücksichtslosen Einsatz der Peitsche tragen. Morrison vergleicht das Narbengewebe mit einem Baum, aus dem neues Leben entspringt – als ich diesen Absatz las, liefen mir Tränen über die Wangen, weil es mir sehr zu Herzen ging, dass die Autorin für etwas so schreckliches und falsches wundervolle Worte fand. Ihren Schreibstil empfand ich insgesamt als sanftmütig, gefasst und würdevoll; sie wedelt nicht mit dem moralischen Zeigefinger vor den Augen ihrer Leser_innen, sondern lässt die beschämenden Wahrheiten ihrer Geschichte für sich selbst sprechen. Sie deutet vieles erst nur an und führt es später genauer aus, wodurch sich das Gesamtbild der Erlebnisse der Sklaven in Sweet Home und ihrer Strategien, ihre Erinnerungen zu verarbeiten, langsam zusammensetzt. Während Baby Suggs ihr Herz für alle öffnete und sich zu einer spirituellen Leitfigur entwickelte, konzentrierte sich Sethe voll auf ihre Mutterrolle. Es stimmte mich traurig, dass Sethe sich zwar selbst befreite, aber niemals frei wurde. Ihre Vergangenheit bestimmt noch immer jeden ihrer Schritte. Sie verfolgt keine Pläne oder Träume, weil ihre Fähigkeit zur Fantasie irreparabel verkrüppelt wurde. Sie flüchtet sich in Gewohnheiten, die ihr Sicherheit vermitteln. Ihr einziger Wunsch lautet, dass ihre Kinder es besser haben sollen. Ich hatte das Gefühl, dass Sethe unbewusst die ganze Zeit darauf wartet, dass das Leben, das sie sich mühsam aufbaute, erneut von außen demontiert wird. Sie erwartet neuen Schmerz, neues Leiden und konnte deshalb nie lernen, ihr Leben auszufüllen, obwohl ihr Lebenswille unfassbar stark ist. So stark, dass sie als Löwenmutter in Kauf nahm, ihre eigene Familie zu zerstören, um ihre Kinder vor den Erfahrungen zu retten, die ihr aufgezwungen wurden. Bis heute beteuert sie die Rechtmäßigkeit ihrer verzweifelten Entscheidungen, doch auf mich wirkte es, als lechze sie nach Absolution. Sie ist nicht überzeugt, dass ihr Handeln richtig war und geißelt sich jeden Tag. Ich habe versucht, mich in sie hineinzuversetzen, herauszufinden, was ich an ihrer Stelle getan hätte. Ich habe keine Antwort gefunden. Ich kann das Ausmaß der Verzweiflung, das Sethe empfunden haben muss, unmöglich nachempfinden, so sehr ich mich auch anstrenge. Darum urteile ich nicht über sie. Ich bemühe mich lediglich, sie zu verstehen, wie Toni Morrison es meiner Ansicht nach auch beabsichtigte. „Beloved“ ist eine eindringliche Aufarbeitung der psychologischen Folgen der Sklaverei, die unverzichtbar für den amerikanischen und globalen Kanon ist. Toni Morrison sagte einst, dass sie das Buch geschrieben habe, weil es für die Opfer der Sklaverei in den USA keinerlei Denkmäler gäbe. Ich glaube, man muss diesen Roman genau auf diese Weise lesen: als Hommage, als Gedenken, als Anerkennung des millionenfachen Leids, dass die Sklaverei verursachte. Wir müssen uns mit unserer Verantwortung, unserer Schuld auseinandersetzen, nicht nur in den Staaten, sondern weltweit, weil die schiere Dimension der Grausamkeit, mit der Menschen damals wie Vieh behandelt wurden, uns alle angeht. Wir wollen mal nicht vergessen, dass sich auch europäische Länder eine goldene Nase mit dem Sklavenhandel verdienten. Außerdem halte ich eine Aufarbeitung dieses vergangenen Unrechts, wie „Beloved“ sie bietet, für unumgänglich, um gegen dessen Entsprechungen in der Gegenwart kämpfen zu können. Sklaverei wird heute Menschenhandel genannt, aber das Prinzip hat sich nicht verändert. Noch immer gibt es Menschen, die ähnliche Verzweiflung und ähnliches Leid wie Sethe erfahren. Jeden Tag. Überall.
-**P
A great but difficult work.
D**X
Nickel
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