The Bluest Eye
 

The Bluest Eye

by Toni Morrison

Oprah Book Club® Selection, April 2000: Originally published in 1970, The Bluest Eye is Toni Morrison's first novel. In an afterword written more than two decades later, the author expressed her dissatisfaction with the book's language and structure: "It required a sophistication unavailable to me." Perhaps we can chalk up this verdict to modesty, or to the Nobel laureate's impossibly high... (read more)

Top tags: fictionafrican americancoming of agecontemporary fictiontoni morrison (all tags)

Discussions

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  • Kim

    kim said:

    It is probably just me, but I struggle to get Toni's stories- but I accept that she is a writer of greatness.

    posted 4 weeks ago ( | view 1 reply )
  • karim A

    karim a said:

    It really just is great

    posted Wednesday, February 27 2008
  • Sally Boustani

    sally boustani said:

    i just loved the book.deep,meaningful,has alot between the lines.it discusses more than one issue,and thats what i like about it,i loved the way Toni Morrison writes. makes u really feel the struggle and pain which the characters go through
    just loved it

    posted Wednesday, December 19 2007 ( | view 1 reply )
  • uplandpoet

    uplandpoet said:

    yeah, appreciate is the word!

    posted Thursday, September 6 2007
  • uplandpoet

    uplandpoet said:

    Hmm, cant say i liked it, hard to be a likable book. when i was a kid, i remeber a big storm coming through our place and blowing the plastic sheeting off the roofs of some of our greenhouses. it was 2 am and our entire family was out in the cold windy rain holding on to the sheeting and tacking it down only to watch it be torn away, again and again, until finally it ripped away and was gone. Even though my personal memory is of a very minor scale, it reminds me of this book, horror fighting horror until the end when horro wins. I do not regret my night in the storm and I do not regret reading this book, both were experiences rich in detail and understanding of the human condition, but i could hardly say i enjoyed either, nor would i willingly put myself through either again.
    Anthony

    posted Thursday, July 19 2007 ( | view 2 replies )
  • LuvReading

    luvreading said:

    These posts jump on and off your home page and I can't even remember if I've posted to this one or not. I can't say I liked it, though. I think it's because everyone hypes it and to me it was just like any other decent book. I think I would've actually liked it more if people wouldn't have talked it up so much.

    posted Wednesday, July 18 2007
  • mostlyspoons

    mostlyspoons said:

    people complain about toni morisson's often gratuitously depressing imagery and themes. but I think they are part of what makes her books real and incredible. I loved this book.

    posted Wednesday, July 18 2007
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