“They shoot the white girl first”
This quote appears as the first
phrase in Paradise, a novel written
in 1997 by Toni Morrison. Born as Chloe Ardelia Wofford in 1931 she is now 84
years old and still works as a professor and active writer. According to the
author, Paradise is the third and final book in a series that includes the Beloved and Jazz, also written by Morrison. The book takes place in Ruby,
Oklahoma and follows a quarrel between a group of men and women. Each chapter
follows a different character from the book and includes flashbacks of
important moments in the town’s history.
I’m not very interested in reading
this book. Although she has received many awards and the book is highly praised
by many people, it does not spark my interest. Many books that shift
perspective after each chapter leave it hard for me to stay involved in the
book.
“After a while I went out and left
the hospital and walked back to the hotel in the rain.”
This quote appears at the
end of A Farewell to Arms, a book
written in 1929 by Ernest Hemingway. Regarded as one of the greatest American
authors of all time, Hemingway has greatly influenced the fiction genre. He was
born in 1899 and died in Ketchum, Idaho in 1961. The books follows an American ambulance
driver named Fredric Henry. While working in the Italian army he meets a girl
named Catherine Barkley. They start a love affair together and the book follows
these characters throughout their experiences during WWI.
I would considered reading this
book. I have read several Ernest Hemingway books in the past and I have always
enjoyed his writing style.


I enjoyed Morrison's Sula, but I could see why you wouldn't be drawn to her stuff. I enjoy reading ABOUT Hemingway maybe more than reading his actual work, but I did read this book a long time ago and liked it.
ReplyDeleteI also find it hard to follow books that shift perspective a lot. I enjoy first-person narratives. They seem more personal, and I feel like I'm taking a walk in another person's shoes when I read them. I think I'd like "A Farewell to Arms." The World War II period was such an interesting time and I've read a lot of stories about it.
ReplyDelete