The Bluest Eye
The Bluest Eye
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New American Library
Just the Series: Oprah's Book Club   

Series and Publisher: Oprah's Book Club   

Annotation: A powerful story of a young black girl who would do anything for her family but is raped by her drunken father. Contains mature material. Contains Mature Material
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #34115
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Teaching Materials: Search
Special Formats: Adult Language Adult Language Mature Content Mature Content
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Copyright Date: 1970
Edition Date: 2007 Release Date: 05/08/07
Pages: 205 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-307-27844-1 Perma-Bound: 0-8000-6324-4
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-307-27844-9 Perma-Bound: 978-0-8000-6324-5
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2007276261
Dimensions: 20 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
School Library Journal (Fri Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2024)

Gr 10 Up —Even though the story is told from the perspective of a young Black girl, Claudia, this narrative focuses on another young Black girl named Pecola, who believes that her impoverished family's Blackness is the key to her failure to thrive. She prays often for blue eyes and believes that her family life will improve if she gets them. While circumstances never do improve for Pecola, through her experiences, Claudia learns more about her own identity. Morrison's writing provides adept character creation, well-paced and rhythmically authentic dialogue, and a masterly use of irony and metaphor. The author presents an ugly picture of the world—violence, death, destruction, and rape. But there is also a beauty that goes beyond society's understanding of what beauty is or can be. A riveting portrayal that centers the experience of Black Americans in the mid-20th century, and offers an incisive view of mainstream culture from a Black perspective. While not portrayed with much detail, scenes of sexual abuse will be troubling to some readers. VERDICT Gritty, often dark, and ultimately jubilant, the novel offers an essential key to understanding American culture.—Bob Hassett & Raven L. Jones

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Library Journal
School Library Journal (Fri Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2024)
NCTE Books For You
Wilson's Fiction Catalog
Wilson's High School Catalog
Word Count: 52,125
Reading Level: 5.2
Interest Level: 9+
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.2 / points: 8.0 / quiz: 36938 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:7.1 / points:12.0 / quiz:Q01387
Lexile: 920L
Nuns go by as quiet as lust, and drunken men and sober eyes sing in the lobby of the Greek hotel. Rosemary Villanucci, our next-door friend who lives above her father's cafe, sits in a 1939 Buick eating bread and butter. She rolls down the window to tell my sister Frieda and me that we can't come in. We stare at her, wanting her bread, but more than that wanting to poke the arrogance out of her eyes and smash the pride of ownership that curls her chewing mouth. When she comes out of the car we will beat her up, make red marks on her white skin, and she will cry and ask us do we want her to pull her pants down. We will say no. We don't know what we should feel or do if she does, but whenever she asks us, we know she is offering us something precious and that our own pride must be asserted by refusing to accept.


School has started, and Frieda and I get new brown stockings and cod-liver oil. Grown-ups talk in tired, edgy voices about Zick's Coal Company and take us along in the evening to the railroad tracks where we fill burlap sacks with the tiny pieces of coal lying about. Later we walk home, glancing back to see the great carloads of slag being dumped, red hot and smoking, into the ravine that skirts the steel mill. The dying fire lights the sky with a dull orange glow. Frieda and I lag behind, staring at the patch of color surrounded by black. It is impossible not to feel a shiver when our feet leave the gravel path and sink into the dead grass in the field.


Our house is old, cold, and green. At night a kerosene lamp lights one large room. The others are braced in darkness, peopled by roaches and mice. Adults do not talk to us -- they give us directions. They issue orders without providing information. When we trip and fall down they glance at us; if we cut or bruise ourselves, they ask us are we crazy. When we catch colds, they shake their heads in disgust at our lack of consideration. How, they ask us, do you expect anybody to get anything done if you all are sick? We cannot answer them. Our illness is treated with contempt, foul Black Draught, and castor oil that blunts our minds.


When, on a day after a trip to collect coal, I cough once, loudly, through bronchial tubes already packed tight with phlegm, my mother frowns. "Great Jesus. Get on in that bed. How many times do I have to tell you to wear something on your head? You must be the biggest fool in this town. Frieda? Get some rags and stuff that window."


Frieda restuffs the window. I trudge off to bed, full of guilt and self-pity. I lie down in my underwear, the metal in the black garters hurts my legs, but I do not take them off, because it is too cold to lie stockingless. It takes a long time for my body to heat its place in the bed. Once I have generated a silhouette of warmth, I dare not move, for there is a cold place one-half inch in any direction. No one speaks to me or asks how I feel. In an hour or two my mother comes. Her hands are large and rough, and when she rubs the Vicks salve on my chest, I am rigid with pain. She takes two fingers' full of it at a time, and massages my chest until I am faint. Just when I think I will tip over into a scream, she scoops out a little of the salve on her forefinger and puts it in my mouth, telling me to swallow. A hot flannel is wrapped about my neck and chest. I am covered up with heavy quilts and ordered to sweat, which I do, promptly.


Later I throw up, and my mother says, "What did you puke on the bed clothes for? Don't you have sense enough to hold your head out the bed? Now, look what you did. You think I got time for nothing but washing up your puke?"


The puke swaddles down the pillow onto the sheet -- green-gray, with flecks of orange. It moves like the insides of an uncooked egg. Stubbornly clinging to its own mass, refusing to break up and be removed. How, I wonder, can it be so neat and nasty at the same time?


My mother's voice drones on. She is not talking to me. She is talking to the puke, but she is calling it my name: Claudia. She wipes it up as best she can and puts a scratchy towel over the large wet place. I lie down again. The rags have fallen from the window crack, and the air is cold. I dare not call her back and am reluctant to leave my warmth. My mother's anger humiliates me; her words chafe my cheeks, and I am crying. I do not know that she is not angry at me, but at my sickness. I believe she despises my weakness for letting the sickness "take holt." By and by I will not get sick; I will refuse to. But for now I am crying. I know I am making more snot, but I can't stop.


My sister comes in. Her eyes are full of sorrow. She sings to me: "When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden walls, someone thinks of me. . . ." I doze, thinking of plums, walls, and "someone."


But was it really like that? As painful as I remember? Only mildly. Or rather, it was a productive and fructifying pain. Love, thick and dark as Alaga syrup, eased up into that cracked window. I could smell it -- taste it -- sweet, musty, with an edge of wintergreen in its base -- everywhere in that house. It stuck, along with my tongue, to the frosted windowpanes. It coated my chest, along with the salve, and when the flannel came undone in my sleep, the clear, sharp curves of air outlined its presence on my throat. And in the night, when my coughing was dry and tough, feet padded into the room, hands repinned the flannel, readjusted the quilt, and rested a moment on my forehead. So when I think of autumn, I think of somebody with hands who does not want me to die.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpted from The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • A PARADE BEST BOOK OF ALL TIME From the acclaimed Nobel Prize winner—a powerful examination of our obsession with beauty and conformity that asks questions about race, class, and gender with characteristic subtlety and grace.
 
In Morrison’s acclaimed first novel, Pecola Breedlove—an 11-year-old Black girl in an America whose love for its blond, blue-eyed children can devastate all others—prays for her eyes to turn blue: so that she will be beautiful, so that people will look at her, so that her world will be different. This is the story of the nightmare at the heart of her yearning, and the tragedy of its fulfillment.
 
Here, Morrison’s writing is “so precise, so faithful to speech and so charged with pain and wonder that the novel becomes poetry” (The New York Times).


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