Go Tell It on the Mountain

by James Baldwin
Go Tell It on the Mountain  
published June 13th 2000 by Dial Press Trade Paperback
binding Paperback
isbn 0385334575   (isbn13: 9780385334570)
pages 240
description First published in 1953 when James Baldwin was nearly 30, Go Tell It on the Mountain is a young man's novel, as tightly coiled as a new sprin...more
date added
06-12-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1842)



SVK
02/18/08

Read in January, 2005
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Christy
bookshelves: african-american-lit, readinglist1
Read in January, 2008
James Baldwin's Go Tell It on the Mountain, an autobiographical novel first published in 1952, is a beautifully written exploration of religious experience in African American life, both North and South. The primary narrative covers less than 24 hours and is focused by the central character's 14th birthday and religious conversion experience. The book is divided into three sections: "The Seventh Day," which focuses on John Grimes, our 14-year-old protagonist, and his decision to...more
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matt
02/21/08

bookshelves: america--f-k-yeah-, fictions-of-the-big-it
Read in September, 2000

Reading this, years ago, I was struck by something I didn't think I'd be struck with.

Recognition!

I was reaised religious, not in anything close to the kind of religiostity he describes- visceral, pummeling, hyperintense- but pretty far-reaching and existential in my own right, if I do say so myself.

Anyway, I was throttled by the sheer force and passion and earnestness of the writing here. I've been on that threshing floor, and even as I feel self-conscious about making that claim,...more
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Bookchica
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: anyone interested in african-american literature, american classics
Go Tell It On The Mountain is a very bold book. In an era when "Ebonics" had not been coined yet, when being black was not every white kids style, James Baldwin stayed so true to the African-American colloquialism. James Baldwin has written with complete truthfulness and self-questioning this parable of finding yourself, finding your belief, finding your God. Are these even different things, or is it one? It is this honesty which keeps you engrossed. Whether you'll end up loving this b...more
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Matthew
James Baldwin's semi-autobiographical first novel, Go Tell It On the Mountain, reads like Virginia Woolf in Harlem. Its hypnotic stream-of-consciousness sentences ramble and digress and resonate with a near-Biblical potency. Though all the action occurs in a single night, centering around fourteen-year-old John Grimes's spiritual (and quasi sexual) awakening, its scope is much larger. In the course of this one night, we see three generations of the Grimes family, watch the evolution of ra...more
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Leah
06/14/07

bookshelves: fiction, onebookonechicago
Read in June, 2007
I had only read a handful of Baldwin's essays (Notes on a Native Son, etc.) before picking up this book. it showcases Baldwin's fine writing, but I was a bit thrown and confused by the usual narrative style.

To wit: The story begins normally enough on John Grimes birthday, we follow him throw the day until he reaches the storefront church his family elongs to and prepares it for the Saturday evening prayer service. At this point the story shifts from a straighforward narrative and turns to f...more
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Ammie
03/05/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to Ammie by: chicago public library
Interesting... I've never gone in much for religion, but this was a really crazy intimate look at born-again-ness. I'm not entirely sure what Baldwin's goal was (I'm pretty sure it wasn't to convert people, but it's a little hard to tell and I'm frankly ignorant as to his history), but what I enjoyed most was the emotional power he conveyed about religion and faith. I don't believe in god particularly, but the way he wrote about religious ecstasy almost makes me wish I did. I particularly en...more
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Lara
06/27/07

Baldwin chronicles the discrete spiritual struggles of many members of a family over time. I first picked this book up right after I read Giovanni's Room, but I think I wasn't ready for the pervasive and imposing Bible presence. This time, though, I was able to push through the scripture and gospel to the compelling human stories that propel the novel. Still, I wished that I had more context for the importance of some of the names and religious anecdotes.

The language and structure of ...more
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Rachel
10/22/07

Read in October, 2007
Sometimes I read fiction I love and a part of me thinks, if I had writing training, and a good idea, and took the time to sit down and write, I could write this.

James Baldwin, in comparison, makes me think I should never write anything so complicated as a grocery list again.

This book is about a boy on his fourteenth birthday struggling with his identity. Baldwin's writing turns it into a passionate, profound struggle with adolesence, family, American history, urbanization, sexualilty, re...more
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Lorraine
bookshelves: independence-branch-book-discussion
Read in April, 2007
I loved Baldwin's prose, it felt like I had fallen into my own thoughts, so familiar and natural were the cadences of his writing. Which strikes me as rather odd, since I am not male, black, didn't grow up in the ghetto in the 30's and 40's. Even the religious themes of the book, though not entirely of my experience, still had common ground in my own growing up in a white evangelical church. Although my fellow group members didn't find as much to admire about this book, I am standing firm in ...more
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Phayvanh
bookshelves: fiction, reviews
Read in January, 1998
recommends it for: everyone
At a time when I was spirialing in self-doubt and slight depression, when I was trying to figure out life and find myself, I found this book while browsing the shelves at the San Frnacisco public librry and lived these lives with such passion and clarity I was brought back into the realm of sensousness and divinity. I read this book and felt saved. Saved from the torture of having to live life alone, from the limp mass-market suspense thrillers that were mere diversions of the soul, saved from...more
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Lane
08/31/07

Read in February, 2008
I'm rereading this book as part of a university-wide discussion. It's rock-em, sock-em good. Although billed as the story of a young man coming of age on his fourteenth birthday, it is so much more than that. Most of the book, in fact, is about John's parents and aunt, the ways each is caught in the grip of their personal and collective pasts, and the way John is unknowingly, inescapably caught up in the same stories and struggles. Those themes run through nearly all of Baldwin's work but ne...more
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Kate
02/27/08

Read in February, 2008
I think this book is beautifully written and has very powerful pieces, but I had trouble understanding it all together. I definitely wish I had read it with a group or in a class to have someone talk it through with me. It is a very complicated book that gives a lot of information and not a lot of answers so it can definitely be an overwhelming read. Also it was hard for me as someone who isn't generally that interested in organized religion to be okay with the fact that religion is both a burde...more
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Alex
Alex rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/21/08

Read in April, 2008
Started and temporarily set aside when I got sucked into Parting the Waters ... will definitely return to finish.

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I tried to start this in Alabama when we were picking up our daughter, and was too distracted to let it sink in. I'm really glad I went back to it. It blows my mind that this was a first novel. The command of character--from the outside to the center of the soul and back again--is astounding. Maybe my favorite novel I've read this year. I almost want to start over agai...more
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Adam
06/01/08

Baldwin is maybe my favorite author. I believe this is his first published book. So it makes sense that the characters are all represented in later books. But this isn't the most entertaining of his novels. It seems he's setting a stage for later material. I can't imagine he was intentionally 'setting a stage.' I would assume he was bursting with these initial, autobiographical themes. Well worth reading if you're at all interested in Baldwin's books or those of African Americans since th...more
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Vanessa
bookshelves: literature
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: God
wow--what a gorgeous and painful, tragic book. I was talking to a friend recently about my favorite writer, Baldwin, and she described him as one of "the most sensitive writers." i think this is a very appropriate choice of words--sensitive. he depicts these very flawed human characters with enormous compassion and is able to see their meanness and suffering with an understanding of the fears from which they are borne. breathtaking prose.
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Ilyas
07/30/07

Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: Everyone
A book full of extremely heavy subjects: Existential choice and angst, the love and hate of one's religion or God, and the many interdependant situations which help to shape one's life and character. Told in a way which gives you the perspectives of all the characters, this book allows you to feel for each individual; an extremely hard quality for a writer to portray.
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Blossom
Read in January, 2008
i absolutely love james baldwin. he is on my top-ten list of people that i wish i could have had a sit down with when they were still alive...
although this is not my favorite of his books, it is still filled with resonance and beauty, and is a must read. i wish it had been the first of his books that i'd read, because maybe i would have liked it even better.
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Erin
12/05/07

If your ever wondering to yourself what it would be like to try heroin, read this book. Never have I read such a vivid and horrifying depiction of a first time. I don't think I would have had the inclination much before the age of 18, when I read this, but it most definitely cured any possible future desire. A powerful story in and of itself.
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Ill
03/04/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2007
I read this for pleasure. Baldwin's language is simple and precise creating a brisk and crisp read. I put it down several times due to life circumstances. I would like to read it again without so many long breaks. It's the first Baldwin work I've read. I'd like to read more to get a better sense of his style and argument.
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.95 (1404 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.98 (46 ratings)
number of reviews: 96






other editions

Go Tell It on the Mountain (Penguin Modern Classics)
Go Tell It on the Mountain (Mass Market Paperback)
Go Tell It on the Mountain (Modern Library)