Rating: Summary: A great introduction to Toni Morrison Review: Sula is shorter and easier to understand than Morrison's two masterpiece longer works, Song of Solomon and Beloved, but that does not mean that it's not a work of great literature. Sula is beautifully written and powerfully rendered. The scenes between Nel and Sula, plus the odd cast of characters like Chicken Little will haunt you long after you finish. Her dialogue is fantastic. Curiously, the last three years when I have taught this book to high school students, the women all loved it and most of the guys didn't. Maybe it's hard for white teen age boys to see the angst of young black girls growing up? Or maybe it's just that as a growing up story of the friendship between two childhood friends, boys that age don't find it that interesting. I agree with the reader below who remarks on the "magic realism" style -- I have always been struck by the way Morrison includes fantanstic elements in her novels: kind of a black folklore meets magic realism confluence. A great read and an important one to her overall corpus.
Rating: Summary: A fascinating book with great emotion Review: Sula by Toni Morrison depicts the lives of two childhood playmates. Morrison proves this book to be powerful by her use of language. It is both enchanting and poetic. She manages to show how friends can seem to be inseparable yet can grow apart from each other. I found it interesting that she wrote detailed experiences of both Nel and Sula as they went from young girls to grown women. The more I read the book, the more I wanted to keep on reading because of all the outrageous experiences they encountered. I find that the number of characters that died and the manner in which they died to be peculiar. There was a point where I felt like the characters in the book were dying left and right. Aside from that, this book was interesting because it seemed so realistic. I was able to picture the emotion of Sula and Nel when Nel confronted Sula of having an affair with her husband. Nel showed true friendship by helping Sula during her dying days even though she had hurt her in the past. Overall this was a great book that beautifully describes the lives of two opposing women.
Rating: Summary: Sula Review: I believe that this book really shows Toni Morrison's genius because she is able to combine several different themes into one book without it becoming confusing. I also like how she has main character for chapters, but gives justice to Sula throughout the book. I enjoyed how the book was metaphorical because it put importance on the different aspects of the book; like the characters, the role of religion, and the community as a whole. I truly enjoyed this book.
Rating: Summary: My First Book By Toni Morrison, But Not My Last Review: "Sula" is the first book written by Toni Morrison that I have read. It will not be the last. This book is set in the mostly Black community, The Bottom, overlooking Medallion, Ohio. It is a study of the relationship between Sula Peace and Nel Wright. With an exceptional use of words that tug and pull at you, force you to listen and think, Miss Morrison brings Sula and Nel to life right before your eyes. In a friendship that spans twenty years, Sula and Nel meet as young children and during that time, "innocently" cause a tragedy that one forgets, the other perhaps does not. As young women, Nel marries and remains in The Bottom while Sula goes off to college, and for a time, moves from city to city. It is Sula's return to The Bottom and one unforgivable event that tears the two friends apart.It is only long after the death of Sula that Nel comes to the realization that they had not been as different as she had allowed herself to believe, one girl good, one girl bad. They had just been "girls together" and each of them, in her own way, had endured endless struggles to survive in the world as black women.
Rating: Summary: One of her best Review: Perhaps for the use of a few words in each line, an economy that always brings grandeur to a work of fiction, Toni Morrison makes one visit the black town of Medallion Hall and meet Sula and Nel, two young girls whose lives are going to take the rest of the book to explain. Not as the difficulty I found reading Jazz, as Gabriel Garcia Marquez`s No one writes to the Colonel and The Old Man and the Sea, Morrison shows a wonderful mastership of the written art. I recommend it as a tender, human book. Undoubtely one of Morrison`s best works.
Rating: Summary: Snapshot of Sula Review: Toni Morrison's Sula is a moving novel about knowing one's true self while dealing with issues such as race, family background, and relationships. Up in the Bottom, which is the hilly area of Medallion where the colored community inhabits, the freindship between conservatively ordinary Nel Wright and emotional yet independent Sula Peace develops and evolves greatly over time and with the events that they experience as they mature. Morrison's own life as a child growing up in a mildly-racist town is incorporated into the story and is an aspect which greatly enhances her work, as well as her unique writing style. She has the ability to mesmerize and captivate the reader with her intriguingly beautiful wording and flowing dialogues. Sometimes, though, it is easy to lose track of what is going on with Morrison's overly descriptive ways, but overall she is a fantastic writer and Sula is indeed a worthwhile piece.
Rating: Summary: Great Book for a Quiet Weekend Review: I had a great time reading this book. Saturday morning with a cup of tea I sat down with this book and didn't get up until I had finished it. It's easy reading and a good story. You can really see and feel the characters.
Rating: Summary: Inspired, brilliant, gloomy, and cheerless Review: For those of you who find it difficult to listen to books on cassette, Sula is an easy listen. Toni Morrison captures the rhythm of her own writing with gentle and soothing tones. Her prose is both brilliant and disturbing. The novel tells the story of Sula, Nel, their families, and the African American community known as the Bottom, which is actually on an infertile hilltop. In the opening, she captures the insanity of Shadrack, a shell-shocked soldier, who cannot bear the perceived deformity of his hands. Elsewhere, Sula's grandmother fears that Sula's helpless drug-addicted uncle is trying to crawl back up in her womb. The images of Nel's loneliness and isolation at one point in the book are remarkably communicated. There is little joy, love and happiness found anywhere in Sula-it is an exploration of various levels of despair. Even the relative joy of childhood play is used only to contrast with the guilt and shame of Nel and Sula causing another child's death. Not a single positive male/female relationship exists in the book. A breakup nearly destroys Nell, and Sula's death comes when she finally opens up her heart. An especially interesting image is when Sula becomes a Leviticus-chapter-sixteen scapegoat for the Bottom. The entire community seems to place the weight of their sins on her and feel a little relief to their own self-righteous ways, and even grow closer to one another. All this time, Sula has a birthmark on her face that keeps getting darker and darker. The community is also brought together by National Suicide Day, instituted by Shadrack, the insane soldier. Again, a small amount of joy is contrasted with the great tragedy of its last celebration. In this novel, Toni Morrison again is unrivaled in beautiful prose, genius imagery, and despair.
Rating: Summary: Intrigued with Sula and Nel Review: This is the first book that I have read written by Toni Morrison and it certainly will not be the last. The story about Sula and Nel's friendship was intriguing and captivating. These two girls grew up as best friends and each choose to live a very different lifestyle. Nel decides to marry and raise a family while Sula goes to college. Through an unforgivable act on Sula's part, the two friends are driven apart. I am looking forward to reading more books by Ms. Morrison and I definetely would highly recommend Sula to anyone.
Rating: Summary: Best novel to get introduced to Toni Morrison through! Review: I have read the Song of Solomon, Beloved, and The Bluest Eyes and without a doubt Sula was the best one of all of them. It's an easier read compared with the others and therefore great introduction to Toni Morrison's writing. Sula is inbedden in the context of the Black experience in America. The Botton, a segregated community of mythical Medallion, Ohio, can be seen as any Black community in any town during the time period of 1919 to 1965. In addition, Sula can also be seen as a symbol of a strong African American woman, who chooses to live the way she wants to and not what others tell her to do. Definetly a must read if one wishes to master Morrison's writing!
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