Hooray for reading!
While the first two weeks of February relied heavily on audiobooks, the last two were all paperback, all the time, baby! Alice Walker’s The Color Purple and Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns were two excellent reads that made me so glad that I’m doing this project.
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Pages: 304 | Published: 1982
I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it. People think pleasing God is all God cares about. But any fool living in the world can see it always trying to please us back.
I’m a little speechless about this book. The reading experience was wonderful. I thoroughly enjoyed spending time with Celie, Shug, Sofia and Nettie and was fully invested in Celie’s growth and self-realization. Her character transforms in the most beautiful way, against all odds, thanks to the love and support of those around her. You hardly recognize her as the person from the beginning of the novel.
In a similar way as Their Eyes Were Watching God, this book inserts you into the lives of black women in the early twentieth century rural south and I found the journey worthwhile. Remnants of that world still exist today which is why it’s important for new generations of readers to discover this book.
The phrase “the least of these” from the Bible comes to mind as I think about some of these characters. While they may not be assigned high value in the rankings of society, the reality is they are “expressions of the divine” and the rest of us can choose to see that.
The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson
Pages: 549 | Published: 2010
I can’t gush about this book enough. Isabel Wilkerson is insanely talented. The length and subject matter should not intimidate anyone because this book is the definition of readable. From some non-fiction writers I get the vibe that they are flexing - they want you to know they are smart and tend to shine a light on themselves rather than the subject matter. Isabel Wilkerson puts her subjects front and center with all the respect they deserve. Her writing isn’t pretentious or showy in any way. The tone is confident because she really does know her stuff.
There has been some debate lately over what to teach in schools, banned books, and feeling discomfort when it comes to learning about racism. Yet here's this landmark, Pulitzer Prize winning work that has been around for over a decade. Anyone can pick it up and read it. One can get sucked into all the drama online and form opinions based on the uninformed and fear-based opinions of others, or, one can check this book out from the library and take advantage of the dozen+ years of research that went into its creation. Ms. Wilkerson has done the work and it shows on every page. I couldn’t detect a “spin” or “agenda” or even a whiff of bias unless you count bias towards truth. I feel kinda lazy but also highly grateful that all I have to do is read. It feels like I’m taking advantage of the situation.
If you are looking for a thoughtful and rigorous treatment of race relations in the US, this is it. Start here. It spells out conditions in the Jim Crow south and the inner lives and struggles of real people who left their homes looking for something better in the north and west. They bravely left everything they knew behind. That’s how bad it was. And while they found conditions better outside of the south, that doesn’t mean life was without struggle.
I'm baffled and beyond impressed with the time, attention, research, effort, everything that Ms. Wilkerson put into this book. She mentions in the acknowledgments that she pursued it as a calling and she thanked God for the will and fortitude to make it through the journey. I also thank God that she brought this into the world.
In recent months I've been reading my grandfather's personal history and enjoyed spending time in another time and place with a dear loved one. Reading The Warmth of Other Suns has been a similar experience and the three subjects of this book feel real and dear to me. Ms. Wilkerson tells their stories with so much grace. She never puts them on a pedestal - these were real people with real problems who made some poor choices in the same way we all do. But they also made courageous and inspiring choices, worked hard, and made an impact through caring for their families and others.
Theirs are the stories that I want to remember and use as a guide in my own life.
Thanks for being here and happy March! The Oscars are at the end of the month so I hope to write something about them in the coming weeks. I typically like the idea of the Oscars much more than the ceremony itself, but we’ll see what happens this year.
I’m currently reading Tana French’s In The Woods and I’m dying to know whodunnit! I almost read the Wikipedia page just to release the tension. Almost…
What has got you excited these days? Let me know!
Kyle