The Poisonwood Bible
by Barbara Kingsolver
Format: eBook
Price: Downloaded from Overdrive
Price: Downloaded from Overdrive
Basic Premise: A young missionary family sets out to Christian-ize a remote area of the Congo in the early 1960s. What began as a bright adventure full of joy and promise leaves the family scarred and scattered.
My Take: 6.5 out of 10 (scale here)
This book was very well-written. It alternated between the perspective of five characters, four of whom were the daughters, and though I anticipated it would be difficult to keep them all straight, it actually wasn't. The beautiful language and imagery made it seem like I could step outside and be there, in the middle of the Congolese jungle, watching children play, swatting mosquitoes, and eating a freshly-picked banana.
But for all the book's positives, it was just so...uncomfortable. The father, the one who felt so "called" to "ministering" to the people of the Congo, was a tyrannical, maniacal psychopath who idolized his own integrity and righteousness far above his God. In this process, he alienated his "church-goers" (who were really just there to come in from the sun) and drove a wedge so deep between himself and his family that when things started to fall apart, he didn't even notice. I did loved how the author played with irony - this man was obsessed with getting people baptized. He kept trying to get people to come down to the river and be baptized, but because he made no effort whatsoever to get to know the people or the culture, he didn't realize the river was infested with vicious crocodiles who had picked off a number of the villagers already. It was so depressing to me to read about this pious, ungodly man who ranked right up there with the scum of the earth and think about the fact that people believed he was a man of God. And because of that sampling, they said, "No, thank you, I don't want anything to do with God." It makes me uncomfortable because I have known people like him and I have read and heard the sorts of things he said. It makes me uncomfortable because I know that, while I strive to love and live for and serve this God, there are visible moments when my life or my words or my deeds or my all of the above reflect the opposite effort. It's a lot to stomach the fact that something I do might shape the opposite feeling about God in others. In short, the discomfort comes from the similarities I was able to draw from this horrible man to myself. It made me shudder many, many times.
ALTHOUGH! There was a glorious moment in the book, where the former missionary in their post comes through, and rather than spouting off about sins and hell and death, he is dispensing food and medicine and clothing to the people who are in such desperate need. One of the daughters begins to dialogue with him about how different the people respond to him over her father. His response, "Well, my dear, there are Christians, and then there are Christians."
Yes. Yes there are.
List Progress:
- I Am Malala
by Christina Lamb and Malala Yousafzaireview here - The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
- The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
- Thirteen Reasons Why
by Jay Asherreview here - The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
A Prayer for Owen Meanyby John Irvingreview hereThe Poisonwood Bible by Barbara KingsolverDoes My Head Look Big in This?by Randa Abdel-Fattahreview here- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Timeby Mark Haddon
Ugliesby Scott Westerfeld(read before I started blogging)- The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz
- Half of a Yellow Sun
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichiereview here Speakby Laurie Halse Anderson (read before I started blogging)- Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Closeby Jonathan Safran Foerreview here- Bossypants by Tina Fey
- Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey
The Hunger Gamesby Suzanne Collins(read before I started blogging)The Secret Life of Beesby Sue Monk Kidd(read before I started blogging)Water for Elephantsby Sara Gruen*abandoned*Eleanor & Parkby Rainbow Rowellreview here- She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb
Harry Potterby J.K. Rowling -can we have a moment for whoever created this list? "Harry Potter" is not a book. It's a series of books. Sheesh.Looking for Alaskaby John Greenreview hereThe Book Thiefby Markus Zuzakreview hereThe Kite Runnerby Khaled Housseinireview here
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