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The Poisonwood Bible  By  cover art

The Poisonwood Bible

By: Barbara Kingsolver
Narrated by: Dean Robertson
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Publisher's summary

“A powerful new epic... [Kingsolver] has with infinitely steady hands worked the prickly threads of religion, politics, race, sin and redemption into a thing of terrible beauty.” - Los Angeles Times Book Review

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.

The novel is set against one of the most dramatic political chronicles of the twentieth century: the Congo's fight for independence from Belgium, the murder of its first elected prime minister, the CIA coup to install his replacement, and the insidious progress of a world economic order that robs the fledgling African nation of its autonomy. Taking its place alongside the classic works of postcolonial literature, this ambitious novel establishes Kingsolver as one of the most thoughtful and daring of modern writers.

©1998 by Barbara Kingsolver. (P)1998 Brilliance Audio, all rights reserved.

Critic reviews

"Haunting...A novel of character, a narrative shaped by keen-eyed women." (New York Times Book Review)

"Beautifully written....Kingsolver's tale of domestic tragedy is more than just a well-told yarn.. Played out against the bloody backdrop of political struggles in Congo that continue to this day, it is also particularly timely." (People)

"The book's sheer enjoyability is given depth by Kingsolver's insight and compassion for Congo, including its people, and their language and sayings." (Boston Globe)

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Visually and Emotionally Powerful

This was such a pleasure. Anyone with a southern Christian background can relate, as can anyone that has felt pain when cultures are pushed to abandon themselves. This book tells many stories that are tightly woven together. A constant reminder of how one small act can set forth change that will echo through history.

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amazing

This has been in my reading bucket list forever. The writing is like nothing I've ever encountered, not understated and masterful.

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A part of the world and history I never knew.

Thank you for my enlightenment in this beautifully written story of truth. I obviously highly recommend this book and this author as well

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Such great story telling.

Really enjoyed this book. It’s the second I’ve read by this author. Demon Copperhead was the first and I also enjoyed that book. The narrator was fantastic!

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the injustice the US has done to the people of the Congo.

I liked the different pov from the four sisters and the mom. The book was beautifully written by Kingsolver. she uses so sayings and word usage of the time the story is written. Her natural way with words and conversations made it easy to.listen to.
It was interesting how hard it was for the sisters and the mom to come back from the Congo. The impoverished way of life in the Congo changed them forever. In a good way they realized that any way of life is livable if that's all you know. excellent book.

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A most amazing story

The reading is dull. But the book transcends that lack.
The relevance of the Christian fundamentalist racked with guilt and intent on inflecting the truth on anyone unfortunate enough to fall under their power/authority is not hard to see.


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    4 out of 5 stars

wonderful book poor choice of narrator

I would profess that this book is a masterpiece written by a master writer. However, I was deeply disappointed with the narrator. How does this happen ; bad narrators getting these jobs? DO BETTER RESEARCH AND TEST RUNS BEFORE PLACING A CONTRACT BEFORE THESE MISERABLE NARRATORS! PLEASE! This narrator is cold and lacks artistry. She also speeds through lyrical sections of beautiful language that should be fully absorbed and savored. Eventually you get used to this cold and seemingly heartless and artless style, but it continues to intermittently frustrate and annoy. This narrator resembles, to my mind, some kind of stern and mean schoolmaster from the 19th century living to make her students miserable. Generally the narrators of audiobooks are thoughtfully and well chosen, but i am beginning to suspect that certain jobs are given as favors to friends or colleagues, for how else could lousy narrators get these jobs. I do not understand. The Audiobook business is, thankfully, an increasing market. I hope this fact will continue to encourage producers to make better and more conscientious choices when hiring narrators.
Nonetheless, this book is such a fine work of literature, that I would recommend it in spite of this very unfavorable narrator.

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Kingsolver Poetry

When I read Barbara Kingsolver's "Pigs In Heaven" I was transported to a world of ordinary life written in simple words which together conveyed color and the music of language. Once again I was enveloped in language and story while engrossed in The Poisonwood Bible. Ms. Kingsolver's word magic was coupled with perfect accent, intonation and emotion in a genius narration. Read (listen) The Poisonwood Bible not just for the story, which definitely keeps a reader's interest, but for the experience of listening to well-chosen words taking you to the color of mid-century Africa.

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story of one family takes hold over another

This story, having it told by all the female members of the Price family, is so engaging that my 16 y o son had to talk about it, analyzing it, spontaneously after listening. He has never before made such a vigorous review including politics, history, characters ending with conclusions showing an understanding, on a new level, of our contemporary history having read or listen ed to a novel.
I understand his reaction after enjoying the listen too and we have discussed it further as more family members have listened too. We all (4, mix grown ups and adolescents) share the opinion the this is a well narrated good story where there characters have room to grow and develop.

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View from a Christian . . .

This is a powerful, gut-wrenching story of a Baptist missionary family in the late '50s and 1960s who leaves Georgia to minister in the Congo. It is unvarnished, portraying the "hell and brimstone" preacher from the south and his prim and proper family, just like many we all have seen before . . . especially back in that era. That's the times I grew up in. That's about the time that I met Jesus myself, in a little country church, in Kentucky. I met Him, but for one reason or another, the people in that church were just like the Price family. So, being a child, I equated those people with my savior, Jesus, and it wasn't long before I was gone. The Poisonwood Bible is one of the best books that I have ever listened to. I grew to love Orleana, Rachel, Adah, Leah and little Ruth May. I loved them each individually and as a group of women with which I could identify in so many ways. Orleana's description of the special love between a mother and her youngest child was an "Ah ha" moment for me. I never knew the history of the Congo before this book, and I'm, once again, saddened that big and powerful governments, like our own take it upon themselves to dominate and steal from countries like Africa, just because they can. In the entire story . . . and it is a STORY . . . I am sad that no where along the way did Nathan Price take the opportunity to do what a real Christian would do . . . there, I've said it . . . Our God cannot work, will not work unless we can humble ourselves and call upon His holy name . . . He is the maker of heaven and earth . . . not us . . . Nathan Price could not bring salvation to the Congo . . . he couldn't even bring love and mercy into his own home . . . Jesus is first and foremost love and mercy . . . The first opportunity that Nathan had to fall on his face to God in this book was when he learned that the villagers would not submit to baptism in the river because the little girl had been eaten by an alligator . . . Did Nathan's heart soften? When Nathan's own plans were not panning out, did he cry out to God and say, here I am Lord, what would you have me to do? Did he weep with those who weep? Did he toil in their fields? When Nathan's five year old daughter died, his first response was, "She wasn't baptized." Any Christian knows it's not baptism that saves you . . . This book is a great book for Christian Bible study on many levels . . . including a women's study. When Leah is protected by the sisters in the convent while her husband is in prison in Africa, it is evident that Christians are working for good in that country. Not to mention that her husband originally learned to read and write from missionaries . . .

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3 people found this helpful