Sula
Toni Morrison
Rating: -
Review:
If I had to come up with a book by Morrison that I didn't like,
that would be Sula. It has the same vivid imagery as her
other books, but it's too much. The scenes that she shows of life
in a black community after the Civil War are just too awful and
gruesome. That is probably part of the point, but in her later
books, Morrison seems to be more able to walk the line of
shocking the reader while not causing them to switch off their
emotional reactions. I think that she does an amazing job of
acheiving this balance in Beloved. The events she
describes are horrible, but they are presented gradually, as the
characters allow themselves to remember them, and rather than
having knowledge of the entire situation thrust on you at once,
it's unfolded peice by piece. I don't think that this detracts
from the strength of the emotional reaction to what happened to
these people. But I never got to the point of just wanting to put
the book down because I didn't think that I could handle reading
it any more. That did happen with Sula. While I can see an
argument that the choice to put the book down and ignore the
events in it is a luxury that black people didn't and still might
not have, the reality is that people can just walk away
from books, so an author dealing with issues like those Morrison
tackles needs to walk a thin line to try to protect herself from
that happening.