Finally, my Great American Read slump is over! I was able to grab a copy of Zora Neale Hurston's "Their Eyes Were Watching God" at my local library's sale for just $1... what a find this was.
I loved this book and can't say enough wonderful things about it. Have you read it? Feel free to comment below. I'd love to hear your thoughts!
It’s early 1900s in rural West
Florida and Janie Crawford is a light-skinned African American sixteen year old
when we first meet her. She lives with her grandmother, who has some very
definite ideas about how Janie should live her life, and this includes whom
Janie should marry. Over the years, and over the course of two marriages, we
see Janie grow up and struggle to come into her own. It’s only during her third
marriage to the charismatic, adventurous Tea Cake that we see Janie finally
grow and thrive as an active participant in her own life.
I finished this book several days
ago and decided to let the story marinate in my mind before I wrote my
thoughts. I knew I loved Their Eyes Were
Watching God, but I just wanted to be sure that I understood why I loved it.
At the heart of this beautiful,
tender, gripping novel is the story of a young woman who is not at all content
living someone else’s life, yet readers are given small glimpses of the strong,
intelligent woman Janie truly is. To me, Janie’s life mirrors some of the
struggles that so many women face in life. The author’s use of symbolism in her
prose to describe the differences and similarities between men and women is
nothing short of poetry.
I know that many readers have found
the vernacular dialect in Their Eyes difficult,
if not almost impossible, to read and understand. While it did slow me down
somewhat, I do think it was a brilliant way for the author to tell the story in
two distinctly separate voices. I urge anyone who has given up on the book for
this reason to try again. It really doesn’t take long to begin to understand
the slang and regional dialect and it is so worth the little added effort.
The story begins shortly after
Emancipation and the author doesn’t shy away from broaching the topic of race
and equality. The author is an expert at subtly weaving the topic of racism
within the book’s passages. Mrs. Turner’s racism against darker skinned blacks
and Nanny’s rape are just two examples. Yet race is not the main topic in Their Eyes. The book focuses much more
on gender inequality, Janie, and her life as an African-American woman living in
the South during that time. This is an important, timeless classic. I’d
encourage anyone to read it.
5
of 5 Stars, Review by Susan Barton, DIY Mom Blog
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