The Poisonwood Bible The Poisonwood Bible

The Poisonwood Bible

A Novel

    • 4.3 • 76 Ratings
    • $11.99

Publisher Description

New York Times Bestseller • Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize • An Oprah's Book Club Selection

“Powerful . . . [Kingsolver] has with infinitely steady hands worked the prickly threads of religion, politics, race, sin and redemption into a thing of terrible beauty.” —Los Angeles Times Book Review

The Poisonwood Bible established Barbara Kingsolver, recipient of the National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, as one of the most thoughtful and daring of modern writers. Taking its place alongside the classic works of postcolonial literature, it is a suspenseful epic of one family's tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction over the course of three decades in Africa.

The story is told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce, evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. They carry with them everything they believe they will need from home, but soon find that all of it—from garden seeds to Scripture—is calamitously transformed on African soil.

The novel is set against one of the most dramatic political chronicles of the twentieth century: the Congo's fight for independence from Belgium, the murder of its first elected prime minister, the CIA coup to install his replacement, and the insidious progress of a world economic order that robs the fledgling African nation of its autonomy. Against this backdrop, Orleanna Price reconstructs the story of her evangelist husband's part in the Western assault on Africa, a tale indelibly darkened by her own losses and unanswerable questions about her own culpability. Also narrating the story, by turns, are her four daughters—the teenaged Rachel; adolescent twins Leah and Adah; and Ruth May, a prescient five-year-old. These sharply observant girls, who arrive in the Congo with racial preconceptions forged in 1950s Georgia, will be marked in surprisingly different ways by their father's intractable mission, and by Africa itself. Ultimately each must strike her own separate path to salvation. Their passionately intertwined stories become a compelling exploration of moral risk and personal responsibility.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2009
October 13
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
560
Pages
PUBLISHER
Harper
SELLER
Harper Collins Canada Limited
SIZE
3.5
MB

Customer Reviews

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The Poisonwood Bible

Barbara Kingsolver has written a very good tale here, which is often sad, often funny but always evocative. Her expert use of similes, through the narrative of the daughters is spectacular. The last third of the book kind of dragged on, for me. Once the girls and mother left the jungle, it seemed to be when Kingsolver put her own views about life forward (still through the character's narrative, of course), and the tale started to assume kind of a dreary, political feel. The earlier part of the book was a description of harsh life in the Congo-fully of the jungle's making. The last part of the book dealt with their continued harsh life, but now the girl's memories and those people around them were the cause of this harshness. Definitely not a feel-good kind of story at so many levels, but one that everybody should read.

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