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seabad's review against another edition
challenging
emotional
sad
medium-paced
4.5
Having finished this book just after reading James, I was paying particularly close attention to how the author addressed the dynamics of language and race in the time period.
“Leave it,” the sheriff said. “I’ll see that he gets it. Batries, I mean”
“Yes, sir, batries,” I said. I had almost said “batteries.”
Speaks to Gaines’s skill as a writer and his trust in his readers to imbue such a simple exchange with so much meaning.
Excellent book, which stuck to its themes steadfast but very effectively.
Excellent book, which stuck to its themes steadfast but very effectively.
saydebug's review against another edition
3.0
This was a pithy novel full of very human characters facing a seemingly insurmountable challenge together. I read the book for a class, so I analyzed it more than I normally would have, but even if I had not, the character's transformations and the lessons they both learned and taught were extremely thought-provoking and insightful. I will definitely be reading more of Gaines's work in the future.
jheher's review against another edition
5.0
Read this years ago and it still impacts me like I just closed the book
kboley's review against another edition
dark
emotional
sad
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
rainbow_road01's review against another edition
4.0
I had to read this for college. I had trouble at the beginning, I think with character names?, but that's just a personal problem. Overall, I found it to be good and I'm interested in what we'll be doing with it in college. The book is definitely suitable for AP classes.
xrayedgrl's review against another edition
challenging
dark
emotional
sad
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
This book wrenched my heart out again and again, however it is such an important book to read
macloo's review against another edition
5.0
Why haven't I read this book before now? I don't know! It's a story of race in America, of how to be strong, how to be humble, how to learn (and earn) respect.
I've been thinking about it for almost 24 hours, and I keep coming back to the idea of self-respect. If a person doesn't show respect to others, it's likely he doesn't respect himself. The parallels and differences between a condemned Black man, waiting in a Louisiana jail cell to die, and a Black schoolteacher in the same town, are like a merry-go-round: They're so different, yet they are the same. They have such different places in society, but they have the same place thanks to American racism. They have different futures ahead, but that's just a flip of a coin.
Grant Wiggens, the teacher, seems to have a big chip on his shoulder. He wants to leave this town, this sugar cane plantation where he grew up, but he can't seem to get it done. His aunt (whose house he lives in) pressures him to help Jefferson, the man convicted of a killing he only witnessed, for the sake of her friend, Jefferson's godmother. There's no way he's going to escape electrocution, so the help Grant is asked to give is to allow Jefferson to walk to that chair on his last day with dignity.
At first this seems impossible, and it comes down to self-respect. Little by little, although he's reluctant and even resents the task, Grant figures out ways to build Jefferson up. It's not flimsy self-help fluff either — that wouldn't do any good. It has to be real. As Grant makes his visits to the jail, we see all the ways that Grant is respected and disrespected out in the world. He interacts with his girlfriend (also a teacher), his aunt, the local preacher, the landowner, the sheriff, and a white deputy named Paul (a very sympathetic character).
I can't convey how marvelous this book is by describing it. It's one of those rare novels that deftly encloses you in someone else's world, using matter-of-fact observation and simple day-to-day dialogue. I kept being reminded of Hemingway because Gaines's sentences are a sparse, clear truth that just give you the world without any fuss or embellishment. I thought several times about To Kill a Mockingbird, which I always loved (and read at least three times) — and while I must still love Scout, that book has now forever fallen from the pedestal I'd kept it on. If a Black man falsely accused of a crime in America was ever shown to us honestly, it's here, in this novel.
.
I've been thinking about it for almost 24 hours, and I keep coming back to the idea of self-respect. If a person doesn't show respect to others, it's likely he doesn't respect himself. The parallels and differences between a condemned Black man, waiting in a Louisiana jail cell to die, and a Black schoolteacher in the same town, are like a merry-go-round: They're so different, yet they are the same. They have such different places in society, but they have the same place thanks to American racism. They have different futures ahead, but that's just a flip of a coin.
Grant Wiggens, the teacher, seems to have a big chip on his shoulder. He wants to leave this town, this sugar cane plantation where he grew up, but he can't seem to get it done. His aunt (whose house he lives in) pressures him to help Jefferson, the man convicted of a killing he only witnessed, for the sake of her friend, Jefferson's godmother. There's no way he's going to escape electrocution, so the help Grant is asked to give is to allow Jefferson to walk to that chair on his last day with dignity.
At first this seems impossible, and it comes down to self-respect. Little by little, although he's reluctant and even resents the task, Grant figures out ways to build Jefferson up. It's not flimsy self-help fluff either — that wouldn't do any good. It has to be real. As Grant makes his visits to the jail, we see all the ways that Grant is respected and disrespected out in the world. He interacts with his girlfriend (also a teacher), his aunt, the local preacher, the landowner, the sheriff, and a white deputy named Paul (a very sympathetic character).
I can't convey how marvelous this book is by describing it. It's one of those rare novels that deftly encloses you in someone else's world, using matter-of-fact observation and simple day-to-day dialogue. I kept being reminded of Hemingway because Gaines's sentences are a sparse, clear truth that just give you the world without any fuss or embellishment. I thought several times about To Kill a Mockingbird, which I always loved (and read at least three times) — and while I must still love Scout, that book has now forever fallen from the pedestal I'd kept it on. If a Black man falsely accused of a crime in America was ever shown to us honestly, it's here, in this novel.
.
magnolia_blossom's review against another edition
5.0
I had been meaning to read this since Louisiana-native Gaines passed away last year. I decided to read it after one of his students, author Wiley Cash, kept popping up in my Instagram feed. I had no idea that this would be the right book for this time.
andinator's review against another edition
5.0
Gutwrenching, left me with tears in my eyes... I now have a much clearer picture of what life must have been like in the Segregated South.
I am baffled as to why no one has tried to turn it into a film.
I am baffled as to why no one has tried to turn it into a film.