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FICTION/Walker Alice
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Walker Alice Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Bildungsromans
Published
Orlando : Harcourt 2003.
Language
English
Main Author
Alice Walker, 1944- (-)
Edition
1st Harvest ed
Physical Description
242 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780156028349
  • Meridian
  • The Last Return
  • The Wild Child
  • Sojourner
  • "Have You Stolen Anything?"
  • Gold
  • Indians and Eestasy
  • English Walnuts
  • The Happy Mother
  • Clouds
  • The Attainment of Good
  • Awakening
  • Battle Fatigue
  • The Driven Snow
  • The Conquering Prince
  • The Recurring Dream
  • Truman Held
  • Truman and Lynne: Time in the South
  • Of Bitches and Wives
  • The New York Times
  • Visits
  • Lynne
  • Tommy Odds
  • Lynne
  • On Giving Him Back to His Own
  • Two Women
  • Lynne
  • Ending
  • Free at Last
  • Questions
  • Camara
  • Travels
  • Treasure
  • Pilgrimage
  • Atonement: Later, in the Same Life
  • Settling Accounts
  • Release
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The Third Life of Grange Copeland (1970) cuts a swathe through southern black life, 19201965, as straight and distinct as a furrow. The stories that comprise In Love and Trouble (1973) pinion and expand the odd personality, the critical moment. But the passage of Meridian Hill through the civil rights movement, in Alice Walker's new novel, is a replay without a firm core. Meridian's great-grandmother was seized with ecstasy at the Sacred Serpent, an Indian burial mound; her father, a visionary too, tried to give the land back to a passing Cherokee; and Meridian, when first met, is a whistle-stop saint facing down a tank so that some black children can discover, without paying, that a touted freak is a fake. After a visit to a once-suspect black church she will break free of abnegation, determine to live and, if necessary, to kill ""for our freedom."" On either hand are her cohorts in the Movement, black painter and poseur Truman Held, given to speaking French, and northern volunteer Lynne Rabinowitz, Meridian's eager friend who becomes Truman's defeated wife. Like the resolution (to which they are tangential), they seem mandated by history rather than invoked by the story. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The Last ReturnTruman Held drove slowly into the small town of Chicokema as the two black men who worked at the station where he stopped for gas were breaking for lunch. They looked at him as he got out of his car and lifted their Coca-Colas in a slight salute. They were seated on two boxes in the garage, out of the sun, and talked in low, unhurried voices while Truman chewed on a candy bar and supervised the young white boy, who had come scowling out of the station office to fill up the car with gas. Truman had driven all night from New York City, and his green Volvo was covered with grease and dust; crushed insects blackened the silver slash across the grill."Know where I can get this thing washed?" he called, walking toward the garage."Sure do," one of the men said, and rose slowly, letting the last swallow of Coke leave the bottle into his mouth. He had just lifted a crooked forefinger to point when a small boy dressed in tattered jeans bounded up to him, the momentum of his flight almost knocking the older man down."Here, wait a minute," said the man, straightening up. "Where's the fire?""Ain't no fire," said the boy, breathlessly. "It's that woman in the cap. She's staring down the tank!""Goodness gracious," said the other man, who had been on the point of putting half a doughnut into his mouth. He and the other man wiped their hands quickly on their orange monkey suits and glanced at the clock over the garage. "We've got time," said the man with the doughnut."I reckon," said the other one."What's the matter?" asked Truman. "Where are you going?"The boy who had brought the news had now somehow obtained the half-doughnut and was chewing it very fast, with one eye cocked on the soda that was left in one of the bottles."This town's got a big old army tank," he muttered, his mouth full, "and now they going to have to aim it on the woman in the cap, 'cause she act like she don't even know they got it."He had swallowed the doughnut and also polished off the drink. "Gotta go," he said, taking off after the two service station men who were already running around the corner out of sight.The town of Chicokema did indeed own a tank. It had been bought during the sixties when the townspeople who were white felt under attack from "outside agitators"-those members of the black community who thought equal rights for all should extend to blacks. They had painted it white, decked it with ribbons (red, white, and of course blue) and parked it in the public square. Beside it was a statue of a Confederate soldier facing north whose right leg, while the tank was being parked, was permanently crushed.The first thing Truman noticed was that although the streets around the square were lined with people, no one was saying anything. There was such a deep silence they did not even seem to be breathing; his own footsteps sounded loud on the sidewalk. Except for the unnatural quiet it was a square exactly like that in hundreds of small Souther Excerpted from Meridian by Alice Walker 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.