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Book Cover
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BookBook
Author Morrison, Toni, author.

Title The bluest eye / Toni Morrison, with a new afterword by the author.

Imprint New York : Plume Book, 1994.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Berlin-Peck Memorial Library - Adult Fiction  FICTION MORRISON c.3  DUE 05-18-24
 Bristol, Main Library - Adult Fiction  F MORRISON c.2  DUE 05-20-24
 Canton Public Library - Adult Department  FICTION MORRISON    Check Shelf
 Colchester, Cragin Memorial Library - Adult Department  FICTION MORRISON, TONI    Check Shelf
 East Hartford, Raymond Library - Adult Department  F MORRISON TONI    Check Shelf
 Farmington, Main Library - Adult Storage  FICTION MORRISON    Check Shelf
 Farmington, Main Library - Adult Storage  FICTION MORRISON c.3  DUE 09-26-23 Billed
 Farmington, Main Library - Teen Department  TEEN FIC MORR c.4  Check Shelf
 Manchester, Main Library - Basement Materials  MORRISON, TONI    Check Shelf
 Plainville Public Library - Adult Fiction  FIC MORRISON    Check Shelf

Description 215 pages ; 21 cm
African Americans lcdgt
Americans lcdgt
Women lcdgt
Nobel Prize winners lcdgt
Series Book club kit
Note Originally published: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970.
Summary Eleven-year-old Pecola Breedlove, an African-American girl in an America whose love for blonde, blue-eyed children can devastate all others, prays for her eyes to turn blue, so that she will be beautiful, people will notice her, and her world will be different. The story of eleven-year-old Pecola Breedlove, the tragic heroine of Toni Morrison's haunting first novel, grew out of her memory of a girlhood friend who wanted blue eyes. Shunned by the town's prosperous black families, as well as its white families, Pecola lives with her alcoholic father and embittered, overworked mother in a shabby two-room storefront that reeks of the hopeless destitution that overwhelms their lives. In awe of her clean well-groomed schoolmates, and certain of her own intense ugliness, Pecola tries to make herself disappear as she wishes fervently, desperately for the blue eyes of a white girl. In her afterward to this novel, Morrison writes of the little girl she once knew: "Beauty was not simply something to behold, it was something one could do. The Bluest Eye was my effort to say something about that; to say something about why she had not, or possibly never would have, the experience of what she possessed and also why she prayed for so radical an alteration. Implicit in her desire was racial self-loathing. And twenty-years later I was still wondering about how one learns that. Who told her? Who made her feel that it was better to be a freak that what she was? Who had looked at her and found her so wanting, so small a weight on the beauty scale? The novel pecks away at the gaze that condemned her."
Study Program Accelerated Reader Grades 9-12 5.2 8 SD Quiz 36938 English fiction.
Reading Counts RC 9-12 7.1 12 53922.
Accelerated Reader AR UG 5.2 8.0 36938.
Subject African Americans -- Ohio -- Fiction.
Girls -- Ohio -- Fiction.
Ohio -- Fiction.
African American girls -- Race identity -- Fiction.
Child abuse -- Fiction.
Racism -- Fiction.
Race discrimination -- Fiction.
Colorism -- Fiction.
Racism. (OCoLC)fst01086616
Colorism. (OCoLC)fst01909400
Child abuse. (OCoLC)fst00854223
African Americans. (OCoLC)fst00799558
Girls. (OCoLC)fst00942866
Ohio. (OCoLC)fst01205075
Genre/Form Domestic fiction.
Domestic fiction. (OCoLC)fst01726589
Novels. (OCoLC)fst01921742
Fiction. (OCoLC)fst01423787
Bildungsromans. (OCoLC)fst01726536
Bildungsromans.
Domestic fiction.
Bildungsromans.
Novels.
ISBN 0452273056
9780452273054
0452282195 (pbk.)
9780452282193 (pbk.)
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