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The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)
The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)
The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)
The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)
The Poisonwood Bible
The Poisonwood Bible
The Poisonwood Bible
The Poisonwood Bible
Bookclub-in-a-Box Discusses The Poisonwood Bible, the Novel by Barbara Kingsolver
Bookclub-in-a-Box Discusses The Poisonwood Bible, the Novel by Barbara Kingsolver
Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible: A Reader's Guide (Continuum Contemporaries)
Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible: A Reader's Guide (Continuum Contemporaries)
 
The Poisonwood Bible
GradeSaver (tm) ClassicNotes The Poisonwood Bible: Study Guide
GradeSaver (tm) ClassicNotes The Poisonwood Bible: Study Guide
 
The Poisonwood Bible (Oprah's Book Club)
Barbara Kingsolver's
Barbara Kingsolver's "The Poisonwood Bible": A Study Guide from Gale's "Novels for Students" (Volume 24, Chapter 9)
 
 

The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)

The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.) Buy this product from Amazon
4
Author : Barbara Kingsolver
Number of Pages : 576
Release Date : 2005-05-31
Publisher : Harper Perennial Modern Classics
List Price : $14.95
Amazon Price : $7.90
Used Price : $4.49

Product Description

The Poisonwood Bible is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce, evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. They carry with them everything they believe they will need from home, but soon find that all of it -- from garden seeds to Scripture -- is calamitously transformed on African soil. What follows is a suspenseful epic of one family's tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction over the course of three decades in postcolonial Africa.

This P.S. edition features an extra 16 pages of insights into the book, including author interviews, recommended reading, and more.

Customer reviews

Just Enjoy the Reading 5 by .. NeverMind (Branson, MO)
Poisonwood Bible is one of my favorite books, why pick it apart? Every few years I get hungry to read it again. My criteria for a good book is simple: Does it make me laugh, cry, think, feel, does it take me into other worlds or other times? Poisonwood does all of those things.

Lost in Africa 4 by .. t. yule (Belle Plaine, MN)
I did a little reading about Kingsolver and I found out that her parents were missionaries, which provides an interesting angle to this all ready interesting novel. The novel is set in Africa in the 1960's. A baptist minister, Nathan Price, brings his wife and 4 daughters to Africa to convert the locals into Christians.

The story is told through the women. At first, with so many narrators, I was a bit confused as to who was who, but after awhile each daughter's voice emerges and it became easier to tell who was telling the story. The mother's voice is heart-wrenching as she looks back at their life in Africa.

There are many layers to this book: sexism and racism being the biggest. But there is also the question of moral authority: who dictates it? Who is right? And who has the right to force it upon others? The women, regardless of culture, are not seeing as influencers of society, but rather as people living through it - getting the laundry done, taking care of the children and not interested in the bigger picture that men play (Leah, the middle daughter, being the exception). There are a lot of questions about society that the book brings up and would be excellent for a book club discussion.

Overall, I loved The Poisonwood Bible. It is definitely a heavy read and the tone throughout the novel is one of sadness. If you are looking for a lighthearted read - this isn't it. If you are interested in something a deeper - read this.

Great story, incredible writing style 5 by .. Bradley Nelson (Minneapolis, MN)
I read this book in high school. Not the kind of book most high school guys would enjoy. But I loved it. The story is certainly interesting, but I was more enamored with the writing style than anything else. Each chapter is told from the first-person perspective of a different member of the family. The chapters told my the mentally retarded daughter are the most fascinating. It is so interesting to see how each different character interprets events differently. A must-read for any fan of literature.

My Introduction to Writing 5 by .. Bob Royal (Phoenix, AZ USA)
This is a book folks have probably already described as one of those you'll compare all that you've read before and since. I will describe it as my introduction to literature, to writing. Perhaps I'm late to the party, what's new? The book was an Oprah book, so lots of us have already been all over this juan, and writefully so.

This story is told first person by 5 persons. I would say girls or women, but can't because it's not that simple, better than that and it wouldn't be fair. A mom and four daughters. Each and every one of them tell this story in turn. These ladies go to Africa with their baptist minister dad, Nathan Price. I want to tell you about these Prize girls and their mom. I'll let them tell you about brother Nathan Price and the other parts. This wheel has already been invented and perfected.

I was thinking earlier today that stories must dream of being told by Kingsolver, like (may god forgive me) an egg wants to be an Egg McMuffin in a corny McDonalds kind of way. To be told by Kingsolver is to be told well. She goes in and doesn't come back out until there are no story prisoners left behind. Like a net dropped into the ocean and brought up and released on deck. The details are there jumping all over the place in plain sight now, as exciting as all get out. Everyone of them will be touched and moved to their rightful place. Every marvelous one of them. I had no idea there was that much just under the surface.

Barbara does 5 entire souls in about 543 paperback pages. Before I finished I knew I was going to go again, and I did. I'm like what am I gonna read now?

From Rachel, the oldest daughter: If anyone presumed I was too young for a conversation about adulters and not getting babies they had another think coming.

From Leah, one of the twins: It struck me what a wide world of difference there was between our sort of games -- "Mother May I?", "Hide and Seek" -- and his: "Find Food", "Recognize Poinsonwood", "Build a House". And here he was a boy no older than eight or nine. He had a younger sister who carried the family's baby everywhere she went and hacked weeds with her mother in the manioc field. I could see that the whole idea and business of childhood was nothing guaranteed. It seemed to me, in fact, like something more or less invented by white people and stuck onto the front end of grown-up life like a frill on a dress.

From Orlenna, mom: I was just one more of those women who clamp their mouths shut and wave the flag as their nation rolls off to conquer another in war. Guilty or innocent, they have everything to lose. They are what there is to lose. A wife is the earth itself, changing hands, bearing scars.

From Adah, the other twin, my favorite: And all of us with our closed eyes smelled the frangipani blossoms in the big rectangles of open wall, flowers so sweet they conjure up sin or heaven, depending on which way you are headed.

From Rachel, describing her twin sisters: They spent so much time staring at each other's faces before they were born they can go the rest of their lives passing up mirrors without a glance.

From Leah describing Mama Tataba, their house-mom. She had a blind eye. It looked like an egg whose yolk had been broken and stirred just once. As she stood there by our garden, I stared at her bad eye, while her good eye stared at my father.

From Adah: Silence has many advantages. When you do not speak other people presume you to be deaf or feeble-minded and promptly make a show of their own limitations. ... It is true I do not speak as well as I can think. But that is true of most people, as nearly as I can tell.

And one more from mom: I know how people are, with their habits of mind. Most will sail through from cradle to grave with a conscience clean as snow. It's easy to point at other men, conveniently dead, starting with the ones who first scooped up mud from riverbanks to catch the scent of a source. Why, Dr. Livingstone, I presume, wasn't he the rascal! He and all the profiteers who've since walked out on Africa as a husband quits a wife, leaving her with her naked body curled around the emptied-out mine of her womb. ...

This is a book I'll always have a copy of to lend, if I'm lucky to have copies of any. There is just so much in this book, so much to love about these women and Africa. The excerpts above are just that, excerpts. None of us can be rightfully described by an excerpt. No way. But a glimpse. The bar has been raised by Kingsolver.

"Gripping story of growing up and finding meaning in life" 5 by .. Ed Philosopher ()
A masterpiece of literary craft and social conscience. A well-researched and biting critique of American imperialism in Africa in the 1950s and '60s, and a matching parable of religion at its worst (and best, thanks to Brother Fowles), all rolled into a gripping story of growing up and finding meaning in life. The multiple first-person structure (wonderfully easy to follow) is pure writer's genius. (I fell in love with Adah!)


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The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.)

The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel (P.S.) Buy this product from Amazon
4.5
Author : Barbara Kingsolver
Number of Pages : 576
Release Date : 2008-06-10
Publisher : Harper Perennial Modern Classics
List Price : $16.95
Amazon Price : $8.75
Used Price : $8.47

Product Description

The Poisonwood Bible is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce, evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. They carry with them everything they believe they will need from home, but soon find that all of it—from garden seeds to Scripture—is calamitously transformed on African soil. What follows is a suspenseful epic of one family's tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction over the course of three decades in postcolonial Africa.

Customer reviews

One of the Few Finest American Novels 5 by .. Kent Ponder (Albuquerque., NM USA)
This is a superbly lyrical, multifaceted, psychologically and sociologically astute masterwork treating a white Christian missionary family's awkwardly tragic attempt to evangelize part of black Africa. Maybe part of my high appreciation for this novel derives from my wife's and my Christian missionary years as well as my later chairmanship of a large African languages department in the Washington DC area.

Kingsolver's academic background in biology allows her to describe African flora and fauna with graceful power. Her descriptions of intercultural-understnding ineptitude, of political and economic upheavals, of rapidly shifting economic actions and reactions, are amazing. Here is just one example of her ability to reach depths of insight with quite simple words: "That's where I was cast ashore, on the riptide of my husband's ambition and the undertow of my children's needs."

I think women find this book fascinating because the story is told, each chapter in the voice of one of the females: the mother, then one of her daughters, then another daughter, then another, and so on, each chapter carrying the vocabulary and language style of its author. Because of the variety of ages represented by the five females, five different viewpoints carry the story along. The preacher-husband, though a principal character, never writes or speaks -- he is only described by each of the five females.

I find that I recommend this book more often than any other novel I've ever read.

Kingsolver is amazing! 5 by .. J. K. Stabler (Sacramento)
I was already a big Kingsolver fan, and this one goes on my list of all-time favorite books. She constructs complex stories with lots of history lessons thrown in, then writes so beautifully I have to reread out loud many passages, paragraphs and ideas.

The first half was fabulous! I can't say the same for the 2nd half. 3 by .. LARRY (Capitol Heights, MD)
For me, *The Poisonwood Bible* could have been on top of my personal list as an all-time classic. Alas! It does not.

I thoroughly enjoyed the first half of this novel. In 1959, Nathan Price, a fire-and-brimstone Baptist envangelist/missionary, uprooted his Georgian family and takes them halfway around the world to the Belgian Congo. Including him, his wife (Orleanna) and his 4 daughters (Rachel, Leah, Adah and Ruth May) were totally unprepared for life in the Congo. I mean, they had packed boxes of Betty Crocker cake mixes.

Though not one to give up, the Price women did their best to mingle and play with the natives. More often than not, they've had to "make do" while still holding on to some semblance of an American life on foreign land. Meanwhile, through frustration and bitterness, Nathan cannot understand why he cannot lead the native souls to salvation. The natives have explained why as well as their worldview. In simplicity, Nathan just had to modify to the natives' interests. However, remaining adamant to his style of belief and salvation, Nathan began to develop a personality that's similar to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This transformation alienates him from the natives and even his family.

All this change when a tragic event occurred. The Price women had enough and returned home in Georgia.

At this point, it would have been great...along with a short story of what happens to everyone in the aftermath. But no, Kingsolver doesn't stop here. She continues the story well into the girls' adulthood, which they're the polar opposite than what they were as kids. And it just doesn't make sense, which made me scream out in frustration. Simply put, the second half killed my interest/liking of the novel.


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The Poisonwood Bible

The Poisonwood Bible Buy this product from Amazon

Author : Barbara Kingsolver
Publisher : Harpercollins
Amazon Price : $35.52
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The Poisonwood Bible

The Poisonwood Bible Buy this product from Amazon

Author : Barbara Kingsolver
Number of Pages : 626
Publisher : Faber and Faber
List Price : $16.50
Amazon Price : $9.09
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Product Description

This is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959.
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Bookclub-in-a-Box Discusses The Poisonwood Bible, the Novel by Barbara Kingsolver

Bookclub-in-a-Box Discusses The Poisonwood Bible, the Novel by Barbara Kingsolver Buy this product from Amazon

Author : Marilyn Herbert
Edition : 2nd
Number of Pages : 93
Publisher : Bookclub-in-a-Box
List Price : $19.95
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Discusses the novel, "The Poisonwood Bible"

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Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible: A Reader's Guide (Continuum Contemporaries)

Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible: A Reader's Guide (Continuum Contemporaries) Buy this product from Amazon
3
Author : Linda Wagner-Martin
Number of Pages : 96
Publisher : Continuum International Publishing Group
List Price : $12.95
Amazon Price : $8.45
Used Price : $4.04

Product Description

This is part of a new series of guides to contemporary novels. The aim of the series is to give readers accessible and informative introductions to some of the most popular, most acclaimed and most influential novels of recent years – from ‘The Remains of the Day’ to ‘White Teeth’. A team of contemporary fiction scholars from both sides of the Atlantic has been assembled to provide a thorough and readable analysis of each of the novels in question.

Customer reviews

So-so 3 by .. KarynH (Virginia)
This contains a few errors here and there although nothing big. It's worth maybe $6 or $8, not the $10 I paid for it. This is reasonably useful if you're writing a paper on the book and are the type to get lost in the story and miss some of the larger picture. Otherwise, not really.

Did she read the book? 1 by .. David R. Lowe (Sunnyvale, CA United States)
Wagner-Martin's guide to The Poisonwood Bible was a disappointment. I had read the novel and I bought Wagner-Martin's book hoping to catch points that I had missed and get a better understanding of the book. Wagner-Martin did bring out some parts of the novel that I had missed and for that I am grateful. But she also got some parts of the book absolutely wrong. Most importantly, she mis-identified the village witch doctor and the person who put a snake in the chicken house which killed the youngest daughter. The fact Wagner-Martin gets confused over the plot seriously undermines her ability to guide any reader through an absolutely wonderful novel.

Good, but not my favorite 4 by .. ()
This book is much different from previous Kingsolver books such as The Bean Trees. However, it is enjoyable and more inventive. The use of different voices is surprisingly easy to follow and gives the story multiple perspectives. The first part of the book is slow, painful, and a bit dogmatic. The father's character is so over the top, he is hard to take. But HANG ON, the second half picks up and the characters become more real.

Very informative and thought-provoking 5 by .. ()
This is a neat book! It starts out with a chapter about Barbara Kingsolver, quite chatty and very interesting. And then there is a much longer chapter about the Poisonwood Bible, which is one of my favourites. This chapter is quite deep and occasionally too 'academic', but most of it is clear and it has made me think about the book. I'm now reading the novel again, and I'm enjoying it even more. The book finishes with three short chapters about how people liked the novel when it came out, and about how it did so well. All of which is interesting in its own way, too. I'm going to read more of Kingsolver's novels now.

If you enjoy thinking about books, and seeing things that you didn't really know were there, and if you loved the Poisonwood Bible, I can recommend this book. The author did a good job!


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The Poisonwood Bible

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Author : Barbara Kingsolver
Number of Pages : 543
Amazon Price : $4.79
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GradeSaver (tm) ClassicNotes The Poisonwood Bible: Study Guide

GradeSaver (tm) ClassicNotes The Poisonwood Bible: Study Guide Buy this product from Amazon

Author : Lane Davis
Number of Pages : 116
Release Date : 2008-06-05
Publisher : GradeSaver, LLC
List Price : $7.99
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Product Description

GradeSaver(TM) ClassicNotes are the most comprehensive study guides on the market, written by Harvard students for students! Longer, with more detailed summary and analysis sections and sample essays, ClassicNotes are the best choice for advanced students and educators. The Poisonwood Bible note includes: * A biography of Barbara Kingsolver * An in-depth chapter-by-chapter summary * A short summary * A character list and related descriptions * A list of themes * A glossary * Historical context * Two academic essays * 100 quiz questions to improve test taking skills!
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The Poisonwood Bible (Oprah's Book Club)

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Barbara Kingsolver's "The Poisonwood Bible": A Study Guide from Gale's "Novels for Students" (Volume 24, Chapter 9)

Barbara Kingsolver's Buy this product from Amazon

Format : Download: PDF
Number of Pages : 31
Release Date : 2006-10-10
List Price : $5.95
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Product Description

Term paper due tomorrow? Need to cram for a test? Or just looking for the best information about a favorite literary work?

Turn to "Novels for Students" to get your research done in record time. Brought to you by Thomson Gale--the world's leading source of literary criticism and analysis--this e-doc contains: author biography; plot summary; character analysis; an overview of the novel's themes, style, and historical context; a compendium of in-depth critical material; study questions; suggestions for further reading; and much more.

Why choose "Novels for Students"? Because no other source offers so much in such a compact package. Trust the experts: Thomson Gale--and "Novels for Students."
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