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Morrison, Toni

Morrison, Toni

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Morrison, Toni

por Paradise

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ISBN 10
0679433740
ISBN 13
9780679433743
Livreiro
Avaliação do vendedor:
Este vendedor ganhou uma 2 de 5 estrelas de clientes da Biblio.
San Francisco, California, United States
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€ 12,09
€ 4,72 Envio para USA
Entrega Padrão: 7 para 14 dias

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Sobre este item

New York. 1998. January 1998. Knopf. 1st American Edition. Previous Owner's Name Penned in Front, Otherwise Very Good in Dustjacket . 0679433740. 321 pages. hardcover. Jacket design by Carol Devine Carson. keywords: Literature Black America Women. FROM THE PUBLISHER - They shoot the white girl first. With the rest they can take their time. No need to hurry out here. They are 17 miles from a town which has 90 miles between it and any other. Hiding places will be plentiful in the Convent, but there is time and the day has just begun. 'They are nine, over twice the number of women they are obliged to stampede or kill and they have the paraphernalia for either requirement: rope, a palm leaf cross, handcuffs, Mace and sunglasses, along with clean, handsome guns.' So begins Toni Morrison's hypnotic and arresting new novel, Paradise, and so will it effectively and hauntingly end. The visit of cruel rage to the Convent frames Paradise, it literally collects and distills all the rich, churning history of this community, focusing the past so that one can say, '[T]he venom is manageable now. Shooting the first woman (the white one) has clarified it like butter: the pure oil of hatred on top, its hardness stabilized below.' The cruelty called forth at the Convent will hold and completely transform Morrison's searing account of Ruby, Oklahoma, transform it for the reader as well as for the unhinged citizens of this town. And the slaughter will transform Ruby's 'true if aloof neighbor,' the mansion-turned-Convent, known, among other things, for its delicious pecan pies and its strings of peppers, 'hot as hellfire.' Between the bookends of violence, Morrison unfolds her long-reaching history of Ruby, an insular black enclave in the flatland fields of Oklahoma, pop. 360. The town keeps a vivid memory of slavery and the infinite sacrifices of its ancestors by maintaining a brick oven with a suggestive, oracular grillwork inscription. The Oven once read, 'Beware the furrow of His brow,' but time has made the iron grill as protean as the history of the town itself, as susceptible to revision as any of their memories. Chapter by chapter, Morrison patiently spins out the cast of women of the Convent, Connie, Mavis, Gigi, Seneca, and the intertwined lives of the townspeople: Soane, Dovey, Patricia, Reverends Pulliam and Misner, the formidable twins Deacon and Steward Morgan, who own the town bank. This is Morrison at her most sure-handed, creating the myths behind the lives of her many characters, at once entangling and disentangling their collective and individual fates. It is why she is perhaps the most celebrated writer in America. The 1993 winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Toni Morrison has forged a hard-edged and lyrical portrait of the American story, exploring the experience of black Americans in her fiction, tracing slavery's roots and the reach of it into life today. Her previous novels include The Bluest Eye (1970); Sula (1973); Song of Solomon (1977), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award; Tar Baby (1981); the successful Beloved (1987), which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize; and the beautiful and brilliant Jazz (1992). Admirers of this previous work will recognize in 'Paradise' an affecting undertow of redemption beneath the vivid pull of violence. As with her other novels, it is in Morrison's attention to language that she is able to show her obvious love and respect for the characters in 'Paradise'. The lyrical intensity and poetry of her language will be familiar, as will her unflinching portrayal of the town's life. With all of their passions, lusts, grudges, dreams, fears, and loves laid bare, the men and women of Ruby and of the Convent seem as fragile and as morally ambiguous as any of us. What the sins of the Convent are, finally, is not completely apparent to everyone in Ruby, inventory #29490 ISBN: 0679433740.

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Detalhes

Livreiro
Zeno's US (US)
Nº do estoque do livreiro
29490
Título
Morrison, Toni
Autor
Paradise
Estado do livro
Usado
Encadernação
Capa dura
ISBN 10
0679433740
ISBN 13
9780679433743
Editorial
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Local de publicação
New York
Esta edição foi publicada pela primeira vez
1997-12-24

Termos da venda

Zeno's

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Sobre o Vendedor

Zeno's

Avaliação do vendedor:
Este vendedor ganhou uma avaliação de 2 de 5 estrelas de Biblio clientes.
Membro de Biblio desde 2004
San Francisco, California

Sobre Zeno's

Zenosbooks.com is a secondhand and out-of-print Internet bookstore. While our stock is general, we specialize in Literature, Mysteries, Latin American Literature, African-American interest, and Translated Literature.

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Jacket
Sometimes used as another term for dust jacket, a protective and often decorative wrapper, usually made of paper which wraps...

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