The poisonwood Bible

a novel

Hardcover, 546 pages

English language

Published Dec. 14, 1998 by HarperFlamingo.

ISBN:
978-0-06-017540-5
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
38916924
Goodreads:
77266

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(68 reviews)

The Poisonwood Bible is a story told by the wife and four daughters of Nathan Price, a fierce, evangelical Baptist who takes his family and mission to the Belgian Congo in 1959. They carry with them everything they believe they will need from home, but soon find that all of it -- from garden seeds to Scripture -- is calamitously transformed on African soil. What follows is a suspenseful epic of one family's tragic undoing and remarkable reconstruction over the course of three decades in postcolonial Africa.This P.S. edition features an extra 16 pages of insights into the book, including author interviews, recommended reading, and more.

15 editions

Brilliant!

I read another Barbara Kingsolver book, The Lacuna, a while ago, and was in two minds about it as I enjoyed the depictions of lives and relationships but was then left cold as the second half descended into dry politics. I was concerned that the brick that is The Poisonwood Bible might go the same way, so was delighted to find that it doesn't. The then current situation in The Congo/Zaire is woven around the immediate story of the Price family but its intricacies are not thoroughly explored so if you're hoping for a more factual novel of the country's upheaval, this might not be the one for you. Instead Kingsolver has created a powerful portrait and caution against the insanity of blind faith and ill-prepared attempts to force one people to the will of another. Her creation of the out-of-their-depth Price family is inspired and I was interested to …

Review of 'The poisonwood Bible' on 'Goodreads'


I was wrong. Years ago I gave up on this book, despising the evil priest, unable to concentrate on anything except the fantasy of him getting eaten by crocodiles in slow motion. This month, at the urging of a friend, I gave it another go. And, as the book progressed, I found my thoughts changing. Becoming more nuanced. I now wanted him to be engulfed alive by driver ants, swarming all over him, entering every orifice, stripping his flesh from the inside and outside. In slow motion. (Unfortunately—spoiler—this does not happen).

Anyhow. This is a difficult and painful book, and I am not its target audience, but I persevered and am glad to have. It’s more than just one book, but it took me too long to see that: there’s the evil priest, sure, but there’s also the women: his conflicted wife, the oh-so-memorable daughters, and the women who keep …

Review of 'The poisonwood Bible' on 'Goodreads'

This is a hard review for me to write. I can see many (many) people loved this book, and I absolutely see what they see. The writing is stunning, no question. The story, told from the points of view of each of the female members of the Price family as if in journal entries, really drove home to me how isolated and out of their element they all were. Each member was written differently, each with their own separate, distinct personalities, and it really all went together beautifully.

My hangup with the whole thing was twofold. First, the buildup to the actual climax of the story was excruciatingly slow. The author does her due diligence in making sure we're right there with the Price family, I just failed to really connect with their day-to-day problems. Even when the major events start happening (and really you could argue that there's only …

Review of 'The Poisonwood Bible' on 'Goodreads'

Again, a book I really loved...going along for the ride, enjoying the scenery, learning something new at every lookout point. Then alas, motion sickness set in and ruined the journey for me. In the case with this book, and again I would have given it 3.5 stars if I could, the last quarter of this book felt too preachy and unrealistic. After that harrowing missionary nightmare, the rest of the book kind of fell flat. I basically quit caring about the characters and that's a shame. All of my favorite books have me wondering at the end, "And then what happened?" But this book left me going, "Whatever." Too bad. It deserved a better ending IMHO.

Review of 'The Poisonwood Bible' on 'Goodreads'

The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver, has been on my TBR pile for such a long time that I'd almost forgotten about it. It was only when I heard Maureen Corrigan reviewing Kingsolver's latest book that I felt a sudden, dire need to read the first book. And shame on me, but I have two more novels by this author that I'd picked up years ago and haven't touched. I might be a hoarder.

Barbara Kingsolver's first novel is indeed riveting and thought-provoking. In 1960, Nathan Price, a Baptist minister from Georgia, takes his wife and four daughters on an ill-advised trip to The Belgian Congo, with the hope of spreading the word of Jesus. Unfortunately, Rev. Price is too arrogant to look and listen to what is going on around him. While his daughters and wife are picking up the local language and having life-changing revelations, he is stubbornly …

Review of 'The Poisonwood Bible' on 'Goodreads'

The viewpoint cycles chapter-by-chapter through the sisters, punctuated by reflections from the mother. There are a couple of really interesting characters, especially Adah, the hemiplegic girl and her twin.
I could pick a few grumbles, but not enough to tip it off five stars - exceptionally readable, probably the best book I've read all year.

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Subjects

  • Americans -- Congo (Democratic Republic) -- Fiction
  • Missionaries -- Fiction
  • Congo (Democratic Republic) -- Fiction