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Women's Fiction

Small Wonder : Essays

Small Wonder : Essays

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My new favorite book!
Review: In the beautiful language and description readers have come to expect from Barbara Kingsolver, she addresses in this collection of essays her concerns for society and the environment. The book reminded me of how crucial these issues are and simple ways that I can lead my life that will work towards a solution to the problems, rather than being a contributor. I've bought several copies for gifts because a book this wonderful begs to be shared.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Small Wonders
Review: I am a liberal and proud of it. I do not hesitate to vocally oppose the occupation in Iraq and the stupid turns our foreign policy has recently taken. I generally agree with all the views expressed in Kingsolver's book. BUT, I still didn't like it. It is offensive when a skilled artist like Kingsolver uses her "publishability" as an opportunity to stand on a soap box. Just write and reflect on the things you know. There are many experts who dedicate their lives to other issues; world politics, economics, the environment, etc. When we want to learn about those issues, those are the books to read. Kingsolver is a fantastic novelist and personal essayist, this does not make her a social/political/environmental expert.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful Thoughts About Life
Review: Small Wonders is a thought provoking collections of essays by the great wordsmith Barbara Kingsolver. In this collection the reader is treated to heart wrenching descriptions of the natural beauty surrounding us everyday. Kingsolver has an eye that many of us do not possess and is able to write in elegant, flowing prose and capture on paper the heart and soul of the land, animal or body of water she is describing. She uses some of these essays to promote her political views which consist mainly of environmental conservation and peace. She does not shy away from blatant statements about the wastefulness of the American culture and the desicions made by the American government. This may be an irritant to those who do not agree with Kingsolvers views and she acknowledges that many people find her conclusions offensive and quotes one instance in particular, in which during a protest for peace a man shouts to her; "hey lady, love it or leave it." I found that Kingsolver was able to weave her statements so beatifully with her stories that the message did not come across so much as staunch political statements but as common sense. If the environment is exhausted to the point of destruction, it can't support any life. My own criticism is that I did feel hopeless and overwhelmed at times by her descriptions of the rate of extinction, the devastation of rainforests, the wastefulness of modern day culture and the propensity for human destruction. But as Kingsolver states at different points in her essays, all any one of us can do is to become more conscious of the small wonders in each of our own backyards and try to protect them with the ferocity that Kingsolver writes about. A very thought provoking look at our culture, the environment, and the rhythms and beauty of life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reviewing Patriotism
Review: This is a thoughtful book that covers many political and emotional issues that effect us all. The beginning and end are political in nature and the middle concerns itself with our moral values and judgements. This is a Must Read for all American's claiming to want peace in this world. She insists that the change starts at home and in our local community. This book is for anyone who feels they are an American patriot and asks us to review that commitment and live up to a new challenge, that actions speak louder than words.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant!
Review: I found this book to be a delightful surprise - written with great passion but also with a lot of grace, Barbara Kingsolver is able to express opinions in an elegant and eloquent way that people can hear. Some may feel her opinions are controversial but I don't. For me, her conclusions are wise and obvious. I think this book should be required reading not only in classrooms for the benefit of the next generation, but also for lawmakers that they too could learn from the wisdom of this thoughtful and wise human being. I would like to see this book on everyone's bedside table.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Did not agree with her views
Review: This was required reading for an English class. While thought-provoking, her anti-American and radical environmental views are twisted. Seriously, this woman portrays us as fat, greedy slobs and suggests we sacrifice all of our belongings as the only way to rid ourselves of this stigma. YEAH, RIGHT!!! She also advocates electric cars and is against any sort of development. It's a good thing she isn't running the world, or her warped ideas would make all our lives miserable.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not brilliant, but worth reading
Review: For all the outcry about Barbara Kingsolver's anti-American, anti-war stance in this book, I was expecting some sort of long winded, rant of a diatribe against U.S. policy in the wake of September 11, 2001. That is what I was expecting. That is what some readers of the book had claimed, that it was ultra-left wing, too preachy, too mired in politics, and riddled with hypocrisy.

I disagree. I thought that this was a well written and interesting collection of essays. Also, the collection was not the amount of politicized essays that I had expected and was led to believe. Most of the essays reflect Kingsolver's ecological interests and themes that we see in her novels (most notably in Prodigal Summer). While some essays skirt around the reality of September 11, most deal with the day to day living that Kingsolver experiences and how she tries to live her life in the most environmentally friendly way possible. She writes about independent booksellers are going out of business and how her first novel "The Bean Trees" was heavily pushed through independent stores and this is how the word of mouth spread. And yes, Barbara Kingsolver does write about September 11. She refuses to accept that the attack was at all justified but does acknowledge that there was an explanation for how the hatred for the United States has probably come in part from our foreign policy. To me, this does not seem like it such a radical opinion. While she does spend a little bit of time (one or two essays, really) on some of the political aspects of 9/11, the other times she addresses the subject is in the impact that it has had in her life and her family, and in communities. She grounds most of her writing in the commonplace that is the focus of her fiction.

I don't agree with everything that Kingsolver believes in and writes about, but she is eloquent in her essays and I am glad to have read them. As she provides an alternate viewpoint to that which is normally presented in the media/society/government today, it is even more important read such dissident voices. Disagree as we may on a given subject, one of the most important freedoms in America is the right to speak against what one believes is wrong. Barbara Kingsolver is a small voice, but a well spoken one. We should at least listen before dismissing out of hand.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Courageous and Touching
Review: I would like to correct one of the reviewers below who claims that the author was only a biology major in college and wonders what her GPA was. She has a master's degree in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from University of Arizona (meaning that her college GPA must have been decent), and has actually worked as a scientist.

I found this book passionate and compelling. Whether one agrees with her political views or not, she gives us a lot to think about, and does it very well. This deeply personal work is not to be missed by any intelligent, thinking individual, on either side of the fence. In addition, her lyrical and eloquent language, with which any Kingsolver fans are familiar, is pure delight in this collection.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Insulting to Americans
Review: Small Wonders is rambling and self-serving. I felt that it was written to try defend her point of view, much of which has come under scrutiny, and to win back some of Kingsolver's lost fans; lost due to her airing her anti-american polital views. Kingsolver has a lot of nerve trying to manipulate readers by using historical events to support her warped views. I will never buy another book of hers again.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Thoughtful and lyrical
Review: Small Wonder is packed with information about biology, the destruction of our planet, man's inhumanity to Man, philosophy - and only occasionally does the reader feel she's being given a lecture. Most of the message comes in 'story,' a kinder and gentler way to impart knowledge.
The title essay has received mixed reviews, dealing as it does with Sept. 11. I found it a beautifully crafted piece of writing, with the information proceeding in a snail-like coil of images and stories that pulled me into its spell.
Small Wonder is a book to buy, to treasure, and to share.


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