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The desires and fears of the American black woman are explored with compassion and understanding in these thirteen short stories.
Admirers of The Color Purple will find in these stories more evidence of Walker's power to depict black women-women who vary greatly in background yet are bound together. Dating back to the early 1970s and 1980s, respectively, these short stories cover the Pulitzer Prize winner's usual ground.
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There's the deliberate cruelty of the psychopath; the temporary kind we all inflict (and immediately regret) in our lesser moments; here Alice Walker wallops us with a third kind, the heartbreaking everyday cruelty that is barely even noticed. Matter-of-fact, taken in stride, Cruelty begotten from earlier cruelty; not necessarily intentional, just, shrug, that's how it is. Invisible in its ubiquity. David Foster Wallace's water.
These are hard-hitting stories. Each is strikingly different from the last; each is enough for one night's reading. You may not be able to speed through this book. Walker's voice is powerful: objective but not cold nor dispassionate. Loving, actually: deeply loving but in no way lovey-dovey.
You may be tempted to abandon it partway. Don't. I prefer not to say any more, just, if you value my judgment, accept my recommendation and keep going.