Guardian Newspaper 1000 Novels discussion

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Song of Solomon
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Song Of Solomon - March 2021
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Darren
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rated it 4 stars
Mar 02, 2021 06:45AM

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Yes, the writing is beautiful. Some turns of the phrase will stick with me forever, like "Magdalene called Lena" telling Milkman that his sisters' childhood was all spent on him like a found nickel. And yes, the book has a mythic quality to it: part personal quest to find out the lead character's own family history (and become a grown-up in the process), part meditation on the wish to escape from the history of slavery in the U.S. by flying away. For all those reasons, it will remain a classic.
But this is a story of severely damaged people, some of whom have good qualities, some of whom even evoke compassion, but none of whom I would want to spend a single afternoon with. It's also a story of sex, and the withholding of it, used perversely as a weapon. Thinking about this book and The Bluest Eye, I really hope they aren't based on Morrison's life experience. I really hope not.


But I stuck with it and it all changed for me when Hagar tried to kill Milkman - from then on the novel seemed to finally coalesce and come together and drive forwards as the three narrative strands of the one generation of Hagar, Guitar and Milkman became focussed. Milkman goes away initially to find gold but ultimately finds his own identity, while leaving behind lives he has unwittingly shattered.
So, I'm glad I finished it. It's satisfying when a novel can completely change the way I think about it this far through. Would I appreciate the first half more now that I have completed the book? Probably, but there are too many other novels to read to make it worthwhile.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Bluest Eye (other topics)Song of Solomon (other topics)