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The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
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Poisonwood Bible, The

by Barbara Kingsolver

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11,79019879 (4.26)331
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Brilliance Audio on CD Unabridged (2004), Edition: Unabridged, Audio CD

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Member recommendations

  1. Booksloth recommends Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver
  2. CatherineRM recommends Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart by Tim Butcher, "I love both these books and they nicely juxtapose each other with their Congo total immersion albeit one fictional and one factual. Tim Butcher traces (see more) the Congo River from its source through the dense equatorial land that the protagonist of the Kingsolver book occupied with his suffering family. Both books made a lasting impression on me and I have great time for Africa as I lived in Tanzania - close to Congo geographically for most of the time - and it has a big place in my heart. Read both books and be enriched!"
  3. allenmichie recommends Out of Africa by Karen Blixen
  4. allenmichie recommends Gordimer: Selected Stories by Nadine Gordimer
  5. allenmichie recommends Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton
  6. kraaivrouw recommends The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver
  7. baobab recommends King Leopold's ghost : a story of greed, terror, and heroism in Colonial Africa by Adam Hochschild
  8. derelicious recommends The Red Tent by Anita Diamant
  9. starfishian recommends A Blade of Grass: A Novel by Lewis Desoto
  10. kiwiflowa recommends The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy

(see all 12 recommendations)

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English (196)  French (1)  Dutch (1)  All languages (198)
Showing 1-5 of 196 (next | show all)
This book was recommended to me many years ago by a beloved English professor, Dr. Ottilie Stafford. Through the years, I have dabbled with it and put it down. It's a long read, but once I fully embraced the read, I began to enjoy the journey. Don't read this book if you are looking for a soft, sweet look at the missionary experience. This book shows a harder reality, with a Pastor who lacks compassion for his wife, daughters, and congregation.. If you are looking for a book that will challenge your thinking and demand examination of issues AND if you are committed to a long read, pick it up. You will find some beautiful language and an opportunity to broaden your world view. ( )
  SandraDoran | Nov 19, 2009 |
One of my all-time favorites. ( )
  tjensen | Nov 12, 2009 |
Great book! ( )
  daisygrl09 | Nov 6, 2009 |
  nkuhn | Oct 30, 2009 |
I bought this knowing absolutely nothing about it except that a lot of people really liked it. Sometimes that's the best way for me to approach a book. After all, if someone had told me it was about a Baptist preacher and his family doing missionary work in the Congo (now Zaire) in 1960, I probably would have passed it by. I'm glad I didn't, though, because it's is so much more than that. Told in alternating narratives between the preacher's wife and their four daughters - snooty Rachel, overeager Leah, cynical Adah, and brutally honest Ruth May - the story unfolds to reveal their individual perceptions and prejudices. Though there is some political discussion (the history of that area is pretty turbulent in places). it is presented in such a way that it comes across as the opinions of the characters, as opposed to leaving the reader feeling badgered by the author. Likewise with the frequent thoughts on religion. In short, this is an extremely well-written and engrossing story and I look forward to reading more by Kingsolver in the future. ( )
1 vote melydia | Oct 28, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 196 (next | show all)
Kingsolver once wrote that ""The point [of portraying other cultures] is not to emulate other lives, or usurp their wardrobes. The point is to find sense.'' Her effort to make sense of the Congo's tragic struggle for independence is fully realized, richly embroidered, triumphant.
added by Shortride | editNewsweek (Nov 9, 1998)
 
A writer who casts a preacher as a fool and a villain had best not be preachy. Kingsolver manages not to be, in part because she is a gifted magician of words--her sleight-of-phrase easily distracting a reader who might be on the point of rebellion. Her novel is both powerful and quite simple. It is also angrier and more direct than her earlier books.
added by Shortride | editTime, John Skow (Nov 9, 1998)
 
The Congo permeates ''The Poisonwood Bible,'' and yet this is a novel that is just as much about America, a portrait, in absentia, of the nation that sent the Prices to save the souls of a people for whom it felt only contempt, people who already, in the words of a more experienced missionary, ''have a world of God's grace in their lives, along with a dose of hardship that can kill a person entirely.''
 
Although ''The Poisonwood Bible'' takes place in the former Belgian Congo and begins in 1959 and ends in the 1990's, Barbara Kingsolver's powerful new book is actually an old-fashioned 19th-century novel, a Hawthornian tale of sin and redemption and the ''dark necessity'' of history.
 
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
Important places
Important events
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
For Frances
First words
Imagine a ruin so strange it must never have happened.
Quotations
I could never work out whether we were to view religion as a life-insurance policy or a life sentence. I can understand a wrathful God who'd just as soon dangle us all from a hook. And I can understand a tender, unprejudiced Jesus. But I could never quite figure the two of them living in the same house.
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers
Book description
Great story of packing all your clothes on your back and leaving everything else behind. Four sisters and how they were changed forever by their suffering in the Congo. Each sister takes a new path different from the others.

Amazon.com (ISBN 0060786507, Paperback)

Oprah Book Club® Selection, June 2000: As any reader of The Mosquito Coast knows, men who drag their families to far-off climes in pursuit of an Idea seldom come to any good, while those familiar with At Play in the Fields of the Lord or Kalimantaan understand that the minute a missionary sets foot on the fictional stage, all hell is about to break loose. So when Barbara Kingsolver sends missionary Nathan Price along with his wife and four daughters off to Africa in The Poisonwood Bible, you can be sure that salvation is the one thing they're not likely to find. The year is 1959 and the place is the Belgian Congo. Nathan, a Baptist preacher, has come to spread the Word in a remote village reachable only by airplane. To say that he and his family are woefully unprepared would be an understatement: "We came from Bethlehem, Georgia, bearing Betty Crocker cake mixes into the jungle," says Leah, one of Nathan's daughters. But of course it isn't long before they discover that the tremendous humidity has rendered the mixes unusable, their clothes are unsuitable, and they've arrived in the middle of political upheaval as the Congolese seek to wrest independence from Belgium. In addition to poisonous snakes, dangerous animals, and the hostility of the villagers to Nathan's fiery take-no-prisoners brand of Christianity, there are also rebels in the jungle and the threat of war in the air. Could things get any worse?

In fact they can and they do. The first part of The Poisonwood Bible revolves around Nathan's intransigent, bullying personality and his effect on both his family and the village they have come to. As political instability grows in the Congo, so does the local witch doctor's animus toward the Prices, and both seem to converge with tragic consequences about halfway through the novel. From that point on, the family is dispersed and the novel follows each member's fortune across a span of more than 30 years.

The Poisonwood Bible is arguably Barbara Kingsolver's most ambitious work, and it reveals both her great strengths and her weaknesses. As Nathan Price's wife and daughters tell their stories in alternating chapters, Kingsolver does a good job of differentiating the voices. But at times they can grate--teenage Rachel's tendency towards precious malapropisms is particularly annoying (students practice their "French congregations"; Nathan's refusal to take his family home is a "tapestry of justice"). More problematic is Kingsolver's tendency to wear her politics on her sleeve; this is particularly evident in the second half of the novel, in which she uses her characters as mouthpieces to explicate the complicated and tragic history of the Belgian Congo.

Despite these weaknesses, Kingsolver's fully realized, three-dimensional characters make The Poisonwood Bible compelling, especially in the first half, when Nathan Price is still at the center of the action. And in her treatment of Africa and the Africans she is at her best, exhibiting the acute perception, moral engagement, and lyrical prose that have made her previous novels so successful. --Alix Wilber

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)

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