Cyrus Leung itibaren Oğuzeli/Sinop, Turkey

cyrusleung

05/14/2024

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Cyrus Leung Kitabın yeniden yazılması (10)

2020-01-15 18:41

İncir Kuşları (Midi Boy) - Sinan Akyüz TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi

Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Alfa Yayıncılık

As I read Barbara Kingsolver's The Bean Trees, I, like the protagonist, found myself on a journey through a world that I didn't quite understand. Many of my questions remain unanswered, but, when I look back on the journey something very substantial resonates with me. Though much may be lost inches below the surface, some things--some great things--like The Bean Trees--survive. Throughout the novel, I often struggled to understand character (and author) motivation. Much of what developed the novel's very premise made no sense to me. The novel begins following a motivated girl who is determined to get a position at a hospital lab, even though her family's low income and her poor worm dissection technique are working against her. She works hard to support her single mother and learn what she can. And then the girl buys a beat-up car with one plan in mind: drive as far as the old thing would take her. Perhaps because I'm so career-oriented or such a planner or maybe because I misunderstood the protagonist's relationship with her mother or couldn't possibly imagine the hardships she faced growing up poor in a small town, but I couldn't imagine how the same girl who tried so hard to help her mother could leave her with only the bare essentials of a plan. (Although it wasn't quite the same girl. Because once she passed through Taylorville, Marietta became Taylor Greer.) I had similar difficulties understanding why Taylor's first (and seemingly only) response to having a young child thrust upon her was to then take care of the child, despite all of her earlier stated desires to be untethered. Once I accepting these two choices, however, Taylor came to life, reborn as a mature young woman who would fight for her way of life. Kingsolver's treatment of male characters also left me with questions. For the most part, men are absent from the novel, sometimes violent, sometimes culpable, often deserters. The two men who play somewhat major roles--Taylor's teacher, Mr. Hughes Walter, and the illegal immigrant slash political refugee Estevan--are idealized and elusive. Not the traditional masculine heroes--a rodeo cowboy is in fact one of the males in the deserter category--these men are clean cut and intelligent. The protagonist develops crushes on each, so that whenever one is in the scene, it seems as if there is backlight creating a radiant halo around his figure. However, these rare exalted male figures seem to exist only as temporary surrogate fathers and leave Taylor with nothing but a sweet memory and hope that one day the ethereal characters might be real. It is almost a reversal of the Victorian angel in the house. The men are ideals, but cannot be held. Though a few aspects left me unsettled, for a short and quick read, The Bean Trees sends a powerful and lasting message. Taylor begins the story as an individual, strong and independent. At the end of the story, she has journeyed, grown, and learned, and is even more powerful, with the independent initiative and strong will that makes her unique. But, in spite of her independence and agency--which she retains--Taylor does not succeed in her journey on her own. Kingsolver presents a cast of resilient and laudable characters who are all a bit scarred, whether from trauma during infancy, poverty, political upheaval, or abandonment issues, yet the characters still find unparelleled strength in themselves and in their community with others. In a world where the traditional familial structure has failed, Kingsolver's characters join together to create their own family, forging bonds much stronger than the blood Taylor spent hours inspecting in a laboratory. Family--real family, not blood-based kinship--is a source of insurmountable strength for Kinsolver's characters. In a novel where the protagonist is actively trying to write her own destiny, choose her own name, and travel as far on life's road as she can handle, the entire cast of characters join together to tell a story that could only be told through the active cultivation of both their solidarity and their individuality. With her diverse cast of characters, Kingsolver weaves a tale of survival, hope, and friendship. Woven together, the characters' threads create a beautiful novel, and the vibrancy of each color (Edna is red) is only magnified by those around it.

Okuyucu Cyrus Leung itibaren Oğuzeli/Sinop, Turkey

Kullanıcı, bu kitapları portalın yayın kurulu olan 2017-2018'de en ilginç olarak değerlendirdi "TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi" Tüm okuyucuların bu literatürü tanımalarını tavsiye eder.