The Poisonwood Bible

by Barbara Kingsolver
The Poisonwood Bible
book data
49257 ratings, 4.09 average rating, 5289 reviews (more data...)
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published
August 28th 2004 (first published 1998) by Brilliance Audio

binding
Audio CD

isbn
1593359020   (isbn13: 9781593359027)

description
Oprah Book Club® Selection, June 2000: As any reader of The Mosquito Coast knows, men who drag their families to far-off climes in purs...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 61723)



Mimi
01/11/08

Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: Ashley
My official review "Tata Jesus is Bängala":

I finished the last 300 pages in 2 days (which is very fast for me - English books). I felt every emotion under the sky with this book. I hated Nathan Price, I hated injustice, I hated my uselessness, I hated the fact that there are no good prospects for Africa in the future. As a Geographic major I strongly believe that the closer you are to the Equator, the longer it will remain a 3rd world country. Of course the country itself is full ...more
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Meghan
04/25/08

Read in January, 2008
This book really made me think about why we adopt certain beliefs: what comes from the environment we are immersed in vs. what comes from within. I loved how Kingsolver shows the world view of an entire family who is experiencing the same basic situations in the Congo, but each member deals with these things very differently. It also brings up issues with culture differences and the obstacles in trying to persuade a culture to change. It poses the question of should they change, is the American ...more
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Alana
03/05/08

bookshelves: fiction, historical
Read in March, 2008
Missionary Nathan Price takes his wife and four daughters into the heart of the Congo in the late 60s. Despite political upheaval and resistance from the native population, his fierce determination to save souls in the jungle never wavers once, even when his unbending ways alienate all those around him. The novel is told by the daughters in alternating chapters with an occasional chapter narrated by the mother. Each of the voices is distinct and recognizable, but the characters bothered me. Rach...more
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Anna
07/29/07

The Poisonwood Bible is incredibly good for many reasons. Advancing through the lives of a family of Georgian missionaries surviving in the Congo, Kingsolver twines her story with the thoughts and perspectives of each of the women. Rachel, the oldest daughter, a princess no matter her setting. Leah, middle child and twin, who is intelligent and level headed. Adah (Hada), the other twin, lopsided and backwards reading, she is far more intelligent than anyone would guess. Ruth May, youngest at 5, ...more
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Heidi
06/24/08

bookshelves: library-book
Read in June, 2008
I had a hard time choosing between 2 and 3 stars -- really, it should be 2.5. I thought the prose was quite lovely; Kingsolver has a nice voice. I enjoyed reading about a part of the world of which I have no experience. The description of the clash of cultures was well done.

However. The author had an agenda and she really didn't mind continually slapping us in the face with it. Now, I don't pretend the US hasn't made mistakes and won't continue on making mistakes. But to equate one gr...more
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Caroline
bookshelves: fiction, read-in-2007
Read in November, 2007
This book was fascinating for a variety of reasons for me. Not only is it set in the jungles of Congo, but the structure really sucked me in so much more than a lot of books. Barbara Kingsolver obviously spent a lot of time researching this book (according to the P.S. text, a couple of decades)--there's a huge list of references used, and the details within the text made me feel almost as if I'd actually been to a little town deep within the jungles of Congo.

Kingsolver had a very nice variet...more
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Rebecca
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for: People interested in Congolese history
I read "The Poisonwood Bible" for two reasons: Because I've always wanted to read a Barbara Kingsolver book and I am intrigued by secular takes on Christianity in modern-day writings.

I just finished it today. It is the story of a missionary family's trek to the Congo, told through the eyes of the four daughters and their mother. The father is a misguided preacher who is trying to escape past demons by force-feeding Christ to a culture that he has neither researched nor desires to u...more
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Ebookwormy
bookshelves: 3-caution, culture, world--africa
Read in September, 2008
On one hand, there is nothing new here, and on this same old tirade, I disagree strongly with the author. Examples:

* Relativism. I'm sorry, I believe infanticide to be wrong for all cultures, for all times.

* Missionaries, particularly protestant missionaries to Africa were entirely the endeavor of egotistic, abusive, colonialists who were merely out to change Africa into either a western society or an exploitative factory for western society. Wrong again, read Tom Hiney's "On the Mi...more
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Lisa
02/29/08

Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: anyone with a heart for Africa, anyone thinking about becoming a missionary
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Mikejencostanzo
Read in June, 2006
I began reading this book with hesitancy and a good portion of discernment. It had been recommended by a non-Christian co-worker as a good book for me to read since "you want to become a missionary." I'm really glad I read it though. There are a number of things I really appreciated about the book.

I really liked how the author, Barbara Kingsolver, told the story through the eyes of each of the characters. She was ab...more
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Annalisa
bookshelves: book-club, favorite-books, historical-fiction
Read in June, 2005
recommended to Annalisa by: bookclub
This is the book Kingsolver was destined to write. It is her life's culmination, her masterpiece. Wrapped up in a fabulous piece of fiction we learn volumes from her expertise in African culture. It is what makes her voice so authentic.

What amazes me about this story, is Barbara Kingsolver's ability to write five very distinct, very different characters and give them all a believable voice. The characters were so vivid, real in their flawed insecurities, and so utterly different. I found mys...more
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Angela Dawn
Riveting...We read this aloud at home and I found it to be beautifully and movingly written, by turns charming and horrifying. Her articulation of the most subtle nuances of experience, the profoundly different narrative voices she assumes like an experienced character actress, and the way she fluently plays with language, show Kingsolver's love and mastery of her craft.
Having been brought up by ultra-religious Christian parents myself, I found the children's and wife's experience strongly res...more
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Rebekah
Read in June, 2004
recommends it for: amateur historians, women, anyone with an interest in Africa or political science
This is my favorite book. Hands down. There is something about this book that strongly affects me every single time I read it. I have read it maybe 8 times. The first time I read it, it was while working in a coffee shop. It was supposed to be my "break time" reading, but I am sure I nearly got fired that week, because I couldn't put it down.

The book is told from the point of view of the Price women, four sisters and their mother, who have all been brought to the Belgian Congo...more
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Steve Gallup
07/22/08

Read in December, 2007
I came to this book with The Bean Trees still fresh in my mind, confident that I would enjoy it thoroughly. I found it a very different kind of novel, in many respects (e.g., the alternating voices of multiple narrators, the very different locale (the Belgian Congo instead of the American Southwest), and the author's increasingly intrusive political message). While I adapted to the changes and got through to the end, it was not the enjoyable experience I'd hoped for. I understand that for...more
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Amy
07/30/08

Read in July, 2008
This novel portrayed the struggle of an American, Christian family to survive in the poor, politically unstable former Congo. Each character represented a different value system:

-Rachel was the Westernized, materialistic primadonna.
-Adah was the depressed, self-described “deformed,” cynical poetic intellect.
-Leah was the most complex, least one-dimensional character who transformed from a stout believer in her fathers’ radical Christianity to an atheist hippy-type who marries a C...more
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