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The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver.
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Biography EssayBarbara Kingsolver renews the Western literary landscape by debunking the myths of individuality and self-determination. Her heroines lead meaningful lives by relying on compromise and ...
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Barbara Kingsolver renews the Western literary landscape by debunking the myths of individuality and self-determination. Her heroines lead meaningful lives by relying on compromise and community. King...
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In the following review, Ewert offers tempered assessment of The Poisonwood Bible, citing weaknesses in Kingsolver's “heavy-handed” interpretation of events.
In 1890 Joseph Conrad...
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In the following review, Klinkenborg offers positive evaluation of The Poisonwood Bible.
The phrase “heart of darkness” occurs only once, as far as I can tell, in Barbara Kingsolver...
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In the following review, Skow offers positive assessment of The Poisonwood Bible.
A forest: monkeys, army ants, poisonous frogs. Below, on a path, a woman and four girls, all in shirtwaist dresses. ...
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In the following review, Leonard offers favorable evaluation of The Poisonwood Bible.
Out of a child's game of Mother May I, looked down upon by a green snake in an alligator-pear tree, Barbara...
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In the following review, Hussein offers favorable assessment of The Poisonwood Bible.
The Poisonwood Bible, the fourth and the most ambitious novel by Barbara Kingsolver, begins in 1959 and proceeds t...
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In the following review, Siegel criticizes the exploitation of personal suffering in contemporary literature and offers negative evaluation of Kingsolver's fiction, including The Poisonwood Bib...
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In the following review, Greene offers favorable evaluation of The Poisonwood Bible.
The Poisonwood Bible begins with a mysterious command: “Imagine a ruin so strange it must never have happene...
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In the following review, Rubenstein offers favorable evaluation of The Poisonwood Bible.
When novelist Barbara Kingsolver was asked by a reader whether her fiction is based on her own life, she replie...
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Africa has experienced racial superiority and discrimination from white colonists. Apartheid contributed to this feeling of separation the Africans had. In the book The Poisonwood Bible, Nathan Price,...
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As the story of the Price's family and their trip to Africa progresses, things continue to get worse and worse and it is now easier to understand the true feelings of all the characters. Orleana, ...
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The subject of change is relevant and important, as it is crucial to the development, and continually present, in the lives of all human beings. Change is the process through which people or any life ...
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Good versus evil; this is an archetypal struggle that everyone is aware of. In this battle, righteousness or a righteous character must conquer a form of malevolence in order to maintain virtue. But ...
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The Poisonwood Bible is based on an American family in 1959. Of coarse, not your typical family ambiance for this one contained mother, father, and four daughters. The father, Nathan Price is an ove...
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"Surprise tantalize, evil eyes, hypnotize," This is a quote from the unique, if not bizarre, mind of young Adah Price, one of the main characters in Barbara Kingsolver's novel, The Poisonwood Bible....
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According to Scholastic Pocket Dictionary a community is a, "group of people with common interests living in a particular area" (Scholastic... 153). The dictionary gives us a rough idea of what a co...
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What Is The True Religion"
The realities of Congo rescued her from the mental enslavement of her father, Nathan Price. Nathan, a Baptist evangelist journeyed with his four daughters and wife to the B...
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Teaching The Poisonwood Bible
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The Poisonwood Bible Lesson Plans contain 126 pages of teaching material, including: