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The
2010 Award |
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A Mercy by Toni Morrison
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Nominated by:
Publisher of Nominated Edition:
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| the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors |
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ABOUT
THE BOOK |
A powerful tragedy distilled into a jewel of a masterpiece by the Nobel Prize–winning author of Beloved and, almost like a prelude to that story, set two centuries earlier. (From Publisher). |
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ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
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Toni Morrison is the author of numerous works of fiction, non-fiction, and children’s literature, most recently, the novel A Mercy. She twice has received the Pulitzer Prize–for Sula (1974) and Beloved (1988)–as well as the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Nobel Prize for Literature. Most recently the Robert F. Goheen Professor of Humanities at Princeton University, she lives in Rockland County, New York. |
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LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS |
Toni Morrison’s A Mercy presents the struggle of women regardless of race, colour and class. She makes an excellent statement in this regard because she suggests that women are engaged in similar struggles. Beautifully written it is an impressionistic story that traces slavery from its early roots; and intense and involving philosophical biblical and feminist novel in which all women are victims but find a way to survive. Great writing, complex character, universal truths. A chorus of female voices of varying ages and classes relates the practice of slavery in colonial America. Poetic prose propels the moving story of a girl separated from her mother and the emotional repercussions. Toni Morrison’s Lyrical and storytelling expertise is unsurpassed in A Mercy, an important, moving chapter in the ongoing fictional representation of race in the United States. In beautiful prose, Morrison tells the story of Florens, she was given away by her mother to Jacob an Anglo-Dutch trader and farmer. The novel explores experiences of sacrifice and abandonment as Florence searches for love, while being a slave in the household.
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