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The Color Purple [Alice Walker] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Color Purple Review: Powerful, Beautifully Written, and Deeply Moving - The Color Purple is an unforgettable read. The storytelling is raw, emotional, and incredibly powerful, and the characters feel so real that they stay with you long after you finish. Alice Walker’s writing is both heartbreaking and hopeful, capturing resilience, love, and transformation in a way few novels do. A timeless classic that absolutely deserves its praise. Review: Great Book - Deep, real, transendental. Heartfelt, intelligent, insightful. And total page turner. Super engaging, never could put it down. Highly recommend anybody interested in life.
| ASIN | 0156028352 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #491,315 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #212 in Classic Literature & Fiction #241 in Literary Fiction (Books) #4,088 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction |
| Book 1 of 3 | The Color Purple |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (28,765) |
| Dimensions | 5.2 x 0.75 x 7.9 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 9780156028356 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0156028356 |
| Item Weight | 8.6 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 300 pages |
| Publication date | May 28, 2003 |
| Publisher | Mariner Books |
P**R
Powerful, Beautifully Written, and Deeply Moving
The Color Purple is an unforgettable read. The storytelling is raw, emotional, and incredibly powerful, and the characters feel so real that they stay with you long after you finish. Alice Walker’s writing is both heartbreaking and hopeful, capturing resilience, love, and transformation in a way few novels do. A timeless classic that absolutely deserves its praise.
E**E
Great Book
Deep, real, transendental. Heartfelt, intelligent, insightful. And total page turner. Super engaging, never could put it down. Highly recommend anybody interested in life.
R**D
A bildungsroman that everyone should read
The Color Purple by Alice Walker captures the journey of Celie, a poor black girl, from age fourteen well into adulthood. Rather than chapters, the novel is broken up and written as multiple letters to God. Celie, the main character, writes about her life this way because after her Pa sexually abused her, he said, “You better not tell nobody but God. It’d kill your mammy,” (1). After two pregnancies at the hand of her father, Celie is married off to a man who degrades and beats her. The novel transitions from letters to God to letters to Celie’s sister Nettie, who joined a family on a missionary in Africa. This shift also reveals a shift in Celie’s mindset, who throughout the novel discovers herself and her religious beliefs. Celie’s life improves as she finds examples in other black women, such as learning to stand up for herself and seeing her own self worth. When I first started reading, I found it difficult, both stylistically and morally. Since the first letters are written when Celie is very young, the sentence fragments are hard to piece together, as seen on page 2 when Celie says, “She ast me bout the first one Whose is it?” However as the novel progresses and Celie ages, the letters are easier to understand and become deeper content wise. Within the first page, there is blunt description of sexual abuse, which reoccurred many times throughout the book. The casual discussion of abuse was hard to get used to, however it succeeded in getting the point across that life for black women in the early 1900s was anything but easy. I liked being able to read a story from a perspective that I have never encountered before. Celie’s progression from hardships to independence and strength was inspiring. I felt that the ending was satisfying, and that I could be happy knowing that Celie found peace in her later life. Alice Walker achieved her goal in inspiring others to carve their own path in life. For example, the novel has two strong female characters who helped teach Celie to be independent. A character named Sophia hit back whenever her husband Harpo hit her. She refused to take a beating from a man, and inspired Celie to stand up for herself. Another character named Shug protected Celie from her abusive husband, which gave Celie the courage to speak up in front of him. At one point Celie describes these women by saying, “You know Shug will fight...She live her life and be herself no matter what,” (253). At the end of the novel, Celie is last seen happy and not being abused by any men. This shows that she took her life into her own hands and made the changes necessary to live a happy life. Although she was born into a poor home and was married off to an abusive man without consent, Celie in the end carved her own path and found strength in others. The novel also shows Celie’s intellectual progression by the syntax becoming more complex towards the end. The reader find Celie contemplating deeper topics rather than just stating the events of her day through fragmented sentences.
D**A
Resiliency
This book is really good, I watched the movie 🍿 when I was a teenager and I enjoyed reading the book last year, because I'm in a book club, and that was the book of the month, it's amazing how strong and resilient the character is, I forgot her name... I read about 60% of it I highly recommend it
J**4
The Color Purple
Celie comes from a very poor family & her mother is very during her last two pregnancies. Being the oldest of the girls, she has to do most all the work around the house, cooking, cleaning, laundry & helping with her younger sisters & brothers. Her Pa doesn’t like her either & the only one she’s close to is her younger sister. As Celie’s mother gets sicker & sicker, her Pa begins visiting her room when she’s 14 y.o.to fill the needs her mother is no longer able to provide. Her mother passes away. Celie has 2 children by him, a daughter & a son before he tires of her & forces her into marriage to a man who beats & abuses her. Her father marries another young girl & Celia gets her younger sister, Nettie, to come live with her & continue her schooling. The man Celie marries is in love with another woman, Shug Avery, & is out late most nights & sometimes several days but he expects Celie to wait on him & his kids from a previous marriage & they don’t respect Celie ant more than her husband does. Celie is still trying to figure out how she feels about God & she writes a lot of letters to God expressing her emotions & doubts. This story covers the hardships & abuse of Celie & many of the people of color she knows. It doesn’t sugar coat the racism involved in their lives & the disadvantages as a result of this predjudice that carries over even in today’s world. Of course, black women were even less appreciated, treated as property & had a much more difficult time than even men of color. It’s a very moving story overall & very well written.
C**G
D**Y
Funny at times. Sad at times. Enlightening all the way through. Written as a series of chats with God and letters to and from Celie and her sister, Nettie, this book takes place over 40 year in Georgia. It highlights the terrible prejudice toward Celie by her own kind. Her life is so bad, being abused, sexually, physically and emotionally by the man she thinks is her father, and having given birth to his two children, she is married off to an equally abusive womanising husband. She is separated from her sister, Nettie, who eventually goes to Africa as a help to a black missionary and his wife. This couple have adopted Celie’s children, unbeknown to her, whose parentage is not known to the missionary couple. Nettie experiences the terrible greed and lust for land and money of the rubber planters, and also the appalling culture of scarification and FGM within the tribe with whom they live. Celie’s life only turns a corner when she meets one of the women her husband is involved with. This lady, Shug, is a strong character who encourages Celie (eventually) to take a stand and be her own person; to fight for what she has a right to – Freedom and equality within the marriage; the right to say ‘No’ and the right to have the letters her sister has been writing to her for years but she has never received. Celie has never had such love and compassion from anyone before Shug and they become intimate. This intimacy is spoken of with sincerity and compassion in the book. Eventually, all things work out okay for Celie, Nettie and Celie’s children but not before they all learn some very important lessons about bigotry, discrimination, sexual and racial relations, their history and our relationship with God.
D**A
Me gusta mucho el libro. Llegó en buen estado.
F**R
Subtil, moderne, éclairant et plein d'espoir.
A**S
Llegó en perfectas condiciones y en menos tiempo de lo esperado. El libro simplemente me conmovió profundamente. No pude soltarlo en toda la semana.
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