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Toni Morrison (1931–2019)

Author of Beloved

102+ Works 79,715 Members 1,726 Reviews 368 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Toni Morrison

Beloved (1987) — Narrator, some editions — 26,427 copies, 447 reviews
The Bluest Eye (1970) — Narrator, some editions; Afterword, some editions — 15,846 copies, 270 reviews
Song of Solomon (1977) 12,525 copies, 137 reviews
Sula (1973) — Narrator, some editions — 8,909 copies, 117 reviews
Jazz (1992) — Foreword, some editions — 5,662 copies, 73 reviews
Paradise (1997) 5,645 copies, 57 reviews
A Mercy (2008) 4,009 copies, 143 reviews
Tar Baby (1981) 3,277 copies, 41 reviews
Love (2003) 2,713 copies, 30 reviews
Home (2012) 1,828 copies, 88 reviews
God Help the Child (2015) 1,515 copies, 78 reviews
Recitatif: A Story (1983) — Author — 608 copies, 39 reviews
Remember: The Journey to School Integration (2004) 526 copies, 67 reviews
The Origin of Others (2017) 455 copies, 16 reviews
The Big Box (1999) 352 copies, 33 reviews
Peeny Butter Fudge (2009) 289 copies, 8 reviews
Song of Solomon / Tar Baby / Sula (1987) 236 copies, 3 reviews
Burn This Book: PEN Writers Speak Out on the Power of the Word (2009) — Editor — 216 copies, 3 reviews
The Book of Mean People (2002) 129 copies, 5 reviews
Please, Louise (2014) 126 copies, 10 reviews
The Nobel Lecture In Literature, 1993 (1993) 103 copies, 2 reviews
Little Cloud and Lady Wind (2010) 78 copies, 6 reviews
Race (2017) 73 copies, 3 reviews
The Tortoise or the Hare (2010) — Author — 71 copies, 6 reviews
Desdemona (Oberon Modern Plays) (2012) 65 copies, 1 review
Who's Got Game? The Lion or the Mouse? (2003) 64 copies, 4 reviews
Who's Got Game? The Ant or the Grasshopper? (2003) — Author — 62 copies, 1 review
Who's Got Game? Poppy or the Snake? (2003) 33 copies, 1 review
11: Witnessing The World Trade Center, 1974-2001 (2002) — Contributor: essay — 29 copies, 1 review
Sweetness 14 copies, 2 reviews
The Bluest Eye {Abridged} (2000) 8 copies
The Site of Memory (2026) 4 copies
Song of Solomon; Beloved (2003) 4 copies
Beloved (2016) 2 copies
Preaiubita 2 copies
Romanzi (2018) 2 copies
Resitatif 1 copy
Samoszacunek (2023) 1 copy
10 - Beloved 1 copy
NE SHTEPI 1 copy
גן עדן 1 copy
2000 1 copy
Jazz (1994) 1 copy
Who's Got Game? The Mirror or the Glass? (2004) — Author — 1 copy
2007 1 copy
Ástkær 1 copy
On Language 1 copy

Associated Works

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn [Norton Critical Edition, 1st ed.] (1884) — Contributor — 2,170 copies, 10 reviews
Literary Theory: An Anthology (1998) — Contributor, some editions — 743 copies, 1 review
The Radiance of the King (1954) — Introduction, some editions — 396 copies, 6 reviews
The Norton Anthology of African American Literature {2nd edition} (2003) — Contributor, some editions — 282 copies, 2 reviews
The Black Book (2019) — Foreword — 194 copies, 1 review
Black Women Writers at Work (1983) — Contributor — 193 copies, 2 reviews
The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010 (2012) — Foreword — 162 copies, 2 reviews
The Mark Twain Anthology: Great Writers on His Life and Work (2010) — Contributor — 157 copies, 1 review
Black on White: Black Writers on What It Means to Be White (1998) — Contributor — 129 copies, 2 reviews
Leaving Home: Stories (1997) — Contributor — 127 copies
Deep Down: The New Sensual Writing by Women (1988) — Contributor — 125 copies
The Penguin Book of Women's Humour (1996) — Contributor — 124 copies
Little (1995) — Preface — 120 copies, 4 reviews
The Matter of Black Lives: Writing from The New Yorker (2021) — Contributor — 117 copies
Out There: Marginalization and Contemporary Culture (1990) — Contributor — 116 copies
Norton Introduction to the Short Novel (1982) — Contributor, some editions — 105 copies, 1 review
Skin Deep: Black Women and White Women Write About Race (1995) — Contributor — 99 copies
Tenderheaded: A Comb-Bending Collection of Hair Stories (2001) — Contributor — 98 copies, 2 reviews
Conversations with Toni Morrison (1994) 94 copies, 1 review
Black Women Writers (1950-1980): A Critical Evaluation (1984) — Contributor — 88 copies
On Girlhood: 15 Stories from the Well-Read Black Girl Library (2021) — Contributor — 84 copies, 1 review
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Concise Edition (2003) — Contributor — 73 copies, 1 review
Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror (1997) — Contributor — 64 copies
Beloved [1998 film] (1998) — Orginal novel — 58 copies, 1 review
The Harlem book of the dead (1978) — Foreword — 56 copies, 2 reviews
The Good Parts: The Best Erotic Writing in Modern Fiction (2000) — Contributor — 40 copies
Seven Contemporary Short Novels [Third Edition] (1997) — Contributor — 40 copies
A Way Out of No Way: Writing about Growing Up Black in America (1996) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews
I Hear a Symphony: African Americans Celebrate Love (1994) — Contributor — 35 copies
Confirmation: An Anthology of African American Women (1983) — Contributor — 25 copies
Nobel Writers on Writing (2000) — Contributor — 15 copies
ArtWorks: The Progressive Collection (2007) — Foreword, some editions — 14 copies
Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am [2019 film] (2019) — Self — 13 copies
The Black photographers annual (1972) — Foreword — 12 copies
The Analog Sea Review: Number Four (2022) — Contributor — 6 copies
Race Traitor 10 (1999) — Contributor — 4 copies
Erotiske fortællinger fortalt af kvinder (1996) — Author, some editions — 2 copies, 1 review
Between Paradise & Earth: Eve Poems (2023) — Contributor — 2 copies
Honey and Rue [sound recording] (1995) — Author — 2 copies
Ice {short story} (1996) — Foreword, some editions — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (792) African American (2,527) African American literature (525) African Americans (397) African-American Literature (421) American (816) American literature (1,226) classic (400) classics (587) family (307) fiction (9,541) ghosts (330) historical fiction (1,199) literary fiction (333) literature (1,305) magical realism (391) Nobel Prize (500) non-fiction (296) novel (1,737) Ohio (323) own (438) race (866) racism (684) read (908) slavery (1,115) to-read (4,358) Toni Morrison (490) unread (466) USA (572) women (435)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Morrison, Chloe Anthony Wofford
Other names
Wofford, Chloe Ardelia (birth name)
Моррисон, Тони
Birthdate
1931-02-18
Date of death
2019-08-05
Gender
female
Education
Howard University (BA, English, 1953)
Cornell University (MA, American Literature, 1955)
Occupations
author
university professor
literary editor
Organizations
Random House
Princeton University
Awards and honors
National Book Award, Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters (1996)
Nobel Prize (1993)
National Humanities Medal (2000)
Norman Mailer Prize (2009)
Jefferson Lecture (1996)
American Academy of Arts and Letters (1981) (show all 10)
Charles Eliot Norton Professorship of Poetry (2016)
PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction (2016)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (2012)
Carl Sandburg Literary Award (2010)
Agent
Amanda Urban (ICM)
William Loverd
Relationships
Morrison, Slade (son)
Brown, Sterling Allen (professor)
Polite, Carlene Hatcher (cousin)
Short biography
Chloe Anthony Wofford Morrison (born Chloe Ardelia Wofford; February 18, 1931 – August 5, 2019), known as Toni Morrison, was an American novelist, essayist, book editor, and college professor. Her first novel, The Bluest Eye, was published in 1970. The critically acclaimed Song of Solomon (1977) brought her national attention and won the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 1988, Morrison won the Pulitzer Prize for Beloved (1987); she gained worldwide recognition when she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993.

Born and raised in Lorain, Ohio, Morrison graduated from Howard University in 1953 with a B.A. in English. In 1955, she earned a master's in American Literature from Cornell University. In 1957 she returned to Howard University, was married, and had two children before divorcing in 1964. In the late 1960s, she became the first black female editor in fiction at Random House in New York City. In the 1970s and 1980s, she developed her own reputation as an author, and her perhaps most celebrated work, Beloved, was made into a 1998 film.

In 1996, the National Endowment for the Humanities selected her for the Jefferson Lecture, the U.S. federal government's highest honor for achievement in the humanities. Also that year, she was honored with the National Book Foundation's Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. On May 29, 2012, President Barack Obama presented Morrison with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 2016, she received the PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction.
Cause of death
pneumonia
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Lorain, Ohio, USA
Places of residence
Washington, D.C., USA
Ithaca, New York, USA
Houston, Texas, USA
Syracuse, New York, USA
New York, New York, USA
Albany, New York, USA (show all 7)
Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Place of death
New York, New York, USA
Map Location
USA

Members

Discussions

Thornwillow Press - Song of Solomon in Fine Press Forum (October 2024)
Group Read: “Paradise” by Toni Morrison in 75 Books Challenge for 2021 (March 2021)
Toni Morrison in Legacy Libraries (November 2020)
March Group Read: Beloved by Toni Morrison in 2015 Category Challenge (April 2015)
Group Read, January 2015: Sula in 1001 Books to read before you die (January 2015)
Toni Morrison- American Author Challenge in 75 Books Challenge for 2014 (May 2014)
Group Read - Beloved in The 11 in 11 Category Challenge (September 2011)

Reviews

1,836 reviews
Pecola Breedlove is a little girl that Claudia - the narrator for most of the story - goes to school with. Pecola is poor and abused and has so internalized racism that she wants nothing more than to have blue eyes so she can be beautiful. Interspersed with Claudia's more straightforward narrative, we also get the stories of various adults in this small Ohio town who come into contact with the kids and affect their lives.

What happens when everyone outside of you tells you you're lesser, show more worthless, ugly, and will never amount to anything? That's what Morrison explores in this book, through multiple characters who have all been affected by racism in one way or another. Claudia and her sister have loving parents and stability, but they like all the other kids in their class buy into colorism. Some of the adults, affected by their own pasts, perpetuate trauma on the next generation. We're told early on that Pecola's father rapes her, and a later chapter gives us the perspective of a pedophile. Pecola's story is the most depressing because she has nothing going for her, but everyone is affected to a lesser or greater extent, and no one - or at least no adult - is fully innocent. This is Morrison's debut novel, and you can see the hallmarks of her style, with beautiful language and memorable characters grappling with racism and the difficulties life brings them. It's not an easy or a happy read, but it's worth engaging with. show less
½
This is the only book of Toni Morrison's that I have been able to read all the way through and it was powerful. It tells the story of young Pecola by telling the stories of the people around her. Morrison's descriptions and insights were nuanced and well-told.

What also makes this book effective is the generational nature of abuse, not just from one generation to the next but also the ways in which abuse happens within a generation. Pecola's parents subject one another to abuse as their lives show more together break down. She witnesses the abuse and rather than run away like her brother she retreats into herself. She has nowhere else to turn for guidance or comfort.

And I was struck by the insight into how compassion and empathy are luxuries that few of the characters can afford. Generations of African-American families have gone through sexual humiliation and degrees of violence, and the scars become visible as harsh words or actions directed towards another. To understand and be forgiven is not an automatic response, and I saw that emptiness as another, larger tragedy for the characters and their tales.
show less
A girl named Lula Ann is born, dark black, to her light-skinned mother, who promptly rejects her and treats her without love as a child, demanding that Lula call her "Sweetness" instead of "Mother". As an adult, Lula Ann renames herself Bride and wears only white, exulting in her beauty, but still dealing with the abuse she endured as a child. A teacher that was put into jail largely on her testimony is released and then her boyfriend leaves, dealing with his own childhood demons.

A story show more that explores racism, colorism, childhood trauma, and more with Morrison's signature fine writing and complex characters. It makes an interesting counterpoint to The Bluest Eye, which I read most recently, as it addresses some of those same ideas of self-love in a world that doesn't accept you, but in a very different way. Not my favorite of Morrison's work, but still well worth reading. show less
½
The town of Ruby, Oklahoma was formed by some residents of Haven, a town founded by their ancestors, former slaves. Several miles away lies the Convent, a former school for native girls now inhabited only by the mother superior and her protégée, Connie. Toni Morrison uses these two settings to explore a set of issues more focused on gender than race. And, as with most of Morrison’s novels, things are much more complicated than they first appear.

The book opens with a group of men from show more Ruby staging a violent raid on the Convent. What would lead them to such an horrific act? Morrison takes her time shedding light on this question. Each chapter focuses on the life of a different woman, usually one who came to stay at the Convent. But the narrative also provides a history of Ruby and its people, albeit in a non-linear way. It can be difficult to keep track of all the characters and their relationships to one another. It’s not until the final chapters that the reader begins to understand why and how the raid happened. This later, more detailed description of the raid was gripping and tragic.

The raid is just one example of violence against women in this novel. All of the women who arrive at the Convent have experienced tragic circumstances, often at the hands of men. There’s a lot of imagery and symbolism, which I cannot claim to have fully unpacked. And I think there’s something supernatural going on as well, in ways reminiscent of Morrison’s Beloved. This was a challenging novel to read and understand, but rather than being confused or turned off by that, I loved it.
show less
½

Lists

Ghosts (1)
2023 (1)
Read (1)
100 (1)
hopes (1)
1990s (1)
bound (1)
Reiny (1)
. (1)
DELETE (1)
. (1)
1980s (2)
AP Lit (4)
1970s (3)
. (3)
el (1)
2024 (1)

Awards

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Associated Authors

Pascal Lemaître Illustrator
Joe Cepeda Illustrator
Claudia Brodsky Lacour Contributor, Editor
Shadra Strickland Illustrator
Sean Qualls Illustrator
Rokia Traoré Lyricist
Robert Pledge Editor, epilogue
André Previn Composer
Samuel Barber Composer
Wahneema Lubiano Contributor
Aesop Creator
Andrew Ross Contributor
Kimberlé Crenshaw Contributor
Kendall Thomas Contributor
Nellie Y. McKay Contributor
Gayle Pemberton Contributor
Nell Irvin Painter Contributor
Michael Thelwell Contributor
Cornel West Contributor
Paula Giddings Contributor
Christine Stansell Contributor
Carol M. Swain Contributor
Manning Marable Contributor
Homi K. Bhabha Contributor
Giselle Potter Illustrator
Carolyn C. Denard Editor, introduction
Zadie Smith Introduction, Foreword
Ed Park Contributor
Russell Banks Contributor
John Updike Contributor
Nadine Gordimer Contributor
Francine Prose Contributor
Paul Auster Contributor
Orhan Pamuk Contributor
Salman Rushdie Contributor
Pico Iyer Contributor
David Grossman Contributor
Nikol G. Alexander Contributor
Kimberlé Crenshaw Contributor
Linda Y. Yueh Contributor
Ishmael Reed Contributor
Drucilla Cornell Contributor
George Lipsitz Contributor
Ann DuCille Contributor
Armond White Contributor
David Roediger Contributor
Leola Johnson Contributor
Peter Sellars Foreword
Annie Leibovitz Photographer
Jane Evelyn Atwood Photographer
Frank Fournier Photographer
Lori Grinker Photographer
Alan Reininger Photographer
Sean Hemmerle Photographer
Fuyong Zhang Photographer
David Burnett Photographer
Fred George Photographer
Peter B. Kaplan Photographer
Minoru Yamasaki Contributor: essay
Kenneth Jarecke Photographer
Pascal Lemaitre Illustrator
Nettie Vink Translator
Mona Lange Overs.
Seppo Loponen Kääntäjä
Carol Devine Carson Designer, Cover designer
Inge Rifbjerg Oversætter
R.D. Scudellari Cover designer
Lynne Thigpen Narrator
Yoshiko Ōkoso Translator
Tanja Handels Übersetzer
Josef Jařab Afterword
Kerstin Hallén Översättare
Krista Kaer Translator
Nitsah Ben-Ari Translator
Jože Stabej Translator
Angela Praesent Übersetzer
Jean Guiloineau Traduction
Thomas Piltz Übersetzer
W.A. Dorsman-Vos Translator
Thomas Blackshear Illustrator
Mireia Bofill Translator
Melissa Jacoby Cover designer
Jordi Gubern Traductor
Kerstin Hallén Translator
Óscar Astromujoff Cover artist
M. Nagy Miklós Translator
Iris Menéndez Traductor
Iriny Togoevoj Translator
kvellkalevi Translator
Kaarina Sonck Kääntäjä
Alex Webb Photographer
Kaarina Ripatti Kääntäjä
Püren Özgören Translator
Renata Gorczyńska Tłumaczenie
Bessel Dekker Translator
Jakuta Alikavazovic Traducteur, postface
Saeed Naqvi Translator
rueacutesylviane Traduction
A. S. Byatt Introduction
Nina Rothfos Cover designer
Claudia Reinhardt Cover photo
Ieva Lesinska Translator
Anton Garikano Translator
Hana Žantovská Translator
Suzanne Dean Cover artist/designer
Júlia Lázár Translator
Aly D Musyrifa Translator
Brian Lanker Photographer
Simone Hilling Traducteur
Thomas Pilz Translator
Tal Nitzan Translator
Alice Hasters Nachwort
Helene Egelund Indlæser
Ruby Dee Narrator
Kaja Gucio Tłumaczenie
Coustè Alberto Introduction
Helmut Schneider Contributor
İrfan Seyrek Translator
Zeynep Baransel Translator
Maja Zaninovic Translator
Irina Negrea Traducător
Evelyn Kay Massaro Tradução
amiraharon Translator
Sibel Ozbudun Translator
molnarkatalin Fordító
Martha Kaplan Author Photo
Reynolds Price Introduction
Owen Wood Cover artist
Ülker Ince Translator
Wendell Minor Cover artist
장 정남 Translator
James L. McGuire Photographer
Amal Manṣūr Translator
Rosanna Webster Cover artist
petrikatvelonisisa Cover designer
Yolanda Muelas Cover designer
wroniakjulita Tłumaczenie
moseulla Narrator
Udo Uibo Translator
Ch'oe In-ja Translator
Jane Santos Narrator
Bodil Engen Translator
Ernest Riera Translator
Toni Parks Photographer
Jody Hewgill Cover artist
Lyubomir Nikolov Translator
Luke Bird Cover designer
Kris Potter Cover designer
Mary Schuck Cover designer
Laurent Linn Designer

Statistics

Works
102
Also by
61
Members
79,715
Popularity
#153
Rating
3.9
Reviews
1,726
ISBNs
1,142
Languages
35
Favorited
368

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