A Lesson Before Dying

A Lesson Before Dying

3.84 of 5 stars 3.84  ·  rating details  ·  21,309 ratings  ·  1,501 reviews
Two African-American men in rural Louisiana are pulled together by circumstance in this gripping novel. A young teacher who has come back to his hometown to help raise the poor quality of education is reluctantly persuaded by his aunt to counsel a man on death row. Emotionally charged and written in a straightforward, powerful style, Gaines sketches the dramatic moments be...more
Hardcover, 272 pages
Published September 29th 1997 by Knopf (first published December 1st 1993)
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Natalie
A lesson Before Dying is a very MOVING book. By reading most of the other reviews I'm sure everyone understands what this novel is about. I'm not positive if I would have appreciated this book in High School had I read it 10 years ago. I would like to thank Mr. Gaines for his lessons!! I've typed out a few powerful passages that moved me...There were more but these are just some I made sure I highlighted!

A hero is someone who something for other people. He does something that other men don't an...more
Kathy McC. Mc.C
Jul 02, 2008 Kathy McC. Mc.C rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone
This book is set in Louisiana in the 1940s. Grant Wiggins is a teacher on a plantation school, disillusioned with his life and his career.
"When you see that those 5 1/2 months you spend teaching each year are just a waste of time. You'll see that it'll take more than 5 1/2 months to scrape away the blanket of ignorance that has been plastered over those brains in the past 300 years."
"I felt like crying, but I refused to cry. There would be many more who would end up like he did. I can't cry f...more
Susan
Jun 05, 2008 Susan rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Everyone

summer book; 07- *A Lesson before Dying* is an realistic non-fiction novel. It involves the story of a man named Ernest Grants, he helps to defend the rights of a black man who was accused of murder in a liquor store with two other men. This book is a very breathe-taking novel because it expands on the idea of how Jefferson (the victim on trial) should be sentenced to death a "man". However, everyone in the courthouse thought that he was a hog and shouldnt be treated as an human being. Jefferson...more
Trishv Valenteen
Sep 23, 2007 Trishv Valenteen rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Everyone
I still think about this book, even after reading it months ago. It’s a very simple story about two African-American men in 1940s Louisiana; one is a teacher and the other is a uneducated man waiting to be executed for a murder he witnessed, but didn’t commit. Both of them have given up hope for their lives, and for humanity in general. They live by the rules of the white majority, and both face a bleak future that’s beyond their ability to change. They are forced to spend time together, and eve...more
Jeanette
This is one of the best books I have ever read. I especially liked the development of Grant. I like the fact that he questions the problems and situations around him. He's not content to stay where he is in life and within himself.
Heather
I enjoyed this book. Very good writing on the authors part. I am however just completely shocked and appauled at the way the black people were treated in this book. It takes place in the 1940's in the south. I know I was taught in history and in school about this but never have actually read a book or I guess paid much attention to it. WOW! Our country has come a long way I am proud to say! I am just so overhelmed I don't have much to say or its hard for me to find the words to describe how i fe...more
Mary Alice
Absolutely incredible book. I was on my couch sobbing during parts of it. And it takes a lot to make me shed tears. Great writing. Brings you right into the moment.
Sandra
Grant Wiggins is a young African American teacher that teaches in a segregated school in Bayonne, Louisiana where he grew up. As the most educated black person in his community, he is asked to help Jefferson, a teenager who is sentenced to death. During Jefferson’s trial, his lawyer tries to defend him by convincing others that Jefferson is a hog and didn’t know what he was doing, but he lost the trial anyway. After the trial, Jefferson only thinks of himself as an animal and acts the same way a...more
Julie
This story is set in Bayonne, La. in the late 1940s. It concerns Jefferson, a mentally slow, barely literate young man, who, though an innocent bystander to a shootout between a white store owner and two black robbers, is convicted of murder, and the sophisticated, educated man who comes to his aid. When Jefferson's own attorney claims that executing him would be tantamount to killing a hog, his incensed godmother, Miss Emma, turns to teacher Grant Wiggins, pleading with him to gain access to th...more
Ann
I reread this book recently after many years and was surprised by nearly everything - but not how good it is. I had forgotten most details of the plot, the narrative structure, the characters, so it was almost like reading it for the first time; and the shock and power of the book hit me anew. This book, about a young black man condemned to die for being in the wrong place at the wrong time in the pre-Civil Rights era South and the young black teacher who is asked to teach him to die like a man,...more
Kellie
There are so many lessons learned when reading this book. This is the story of Jefferson. Jefferson is at the wrong place at the wrong time and is accused and convicted of robbery and murder. He is referred to, by his own defense lawyer, as a “hog”. The reader knows he is innocent. He is convicted by a jury of 12 white men. He is sentenced to death by electrocution. Even though he is innocent and all of the black people know it, it is accepted. This is the hardest thing for me to understand. The...more
Katie P.
Jun 05, 2008 Katie P. added it  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Teens, Adults
Grant Wiggins resides in Bayonne, Louisiana where he teaches at the local plantation school. Grant is one of the first members of his family to attend college. He is very driven and strives for success. He is the protagonist of the novel.
At the beginning of the story, we are introduced to Jefferson, a young African American that gets into a bad predicament as he is caught in the middle of a robbery and the murder of a white shopkeeper. (To me, the first few chapters were confusing because of th...more
jo
i reread a lesson before dying. i remembered it not at all. all i remembered was that there were many conversations between someone and someone else, the latter of whom was about to be executed.

but i remembered wrong. there aren't many conversations between the two. in fact, they barely exchange a few hundred words. and, in the balance of the book, the scenes in which they meet take very little space.

which saddened me at the beginning, because i was in the mood for some good writing about how yo...more
Ashley (cnthrdlywt2bwz)
This book was beautiful. It was emotional and I couldn't control my nose from running as I read the end at work. One of my top ten of all time reads.
Here's a very good review by another goodreads member: "It’s a very simple story about two African-American men in 1940s Louisiana; one is a teacher and the other is a uneducated man waiting to be executed for a murder he witnessed, but didn’t commit. Both of them have given up hope for their lives, and for humanity in general. They live by the rul...more
Tyshae Frazier
This book was extraordinary! In the beginning of the book it starts right away with action. A boy named Jefferson makes some dumb decisions and has to go to trial where he is sentenced to be electrocuted, but thats not even the worst part! The book is all based on the idea of jefferson becoming a man, not a hog. Throughout the book there are multiple emotional moments, conflicts, and surprising moments. This book will keep you on the edge of your seat and you won't want to put it down!
Irene
An intensely vivid view of 1940's Southern racial injustice in a small Louisiana town. Grant Wiggins endeavors to impart his greatest lesson and gift to Jefferson in his struggle to face a death penalty he neither deserves nor is willing to accept...dignity and personal redemption.
Katy Meldau Cummings
A tragic but grippingly powerful story. At the request of the accused grandmother, a school teacher attempts to help a young, innocent, but ignorant black teenager prepare to die in the electric chair in the Jim Crow South. Literature has long grappled with the reality of our mutual doom, death. But no other story so bravely and resolutely stares down the most bitter of fates, to die unjustly, in youth, in oblivion. The ancient greek and norse heros had the solace of their fame, the revolutionar...more
Ben
The book is placed in the 1940s in a time of racism and segregation. A black man named Jefferson happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time and was arrested because he was black and of other false accusations. He is sentenced to death but his aunt does not want Jefferson to die a "dog" or in his current state, but to die as a man. Grant Wiggins, who returns to his hometown after finishing school, comes back with surprising and unexpected requests. This book is interesting and a great bo...more
Teresa
Very emotional, had me tearing up at the end and i kept wanting to read. The chapters are short do you don't get bogged down.

I have to be honest, the main character sometimes seems unbelievable. When I first started reading it I couldn't tell how old he was or what race he was,which is important for a novel based in the south when racism was still VERY big. Hes a full grown man but acts like a ten year old. Maybe that's the point of the novel, his coming of age, and I missed it, but that bothere...more
Michael
A tale of Jefferson, a poor black man in Louisiana in the late 40's, sentenced to death for a crime he didn't commit, and the teacher, Grant Wiggins, who is asked to help him somehow to become more of a man before he dies. Grant has little faith in his value as a teacher to elementary kids facing an unjust and impoverished life or belief in any afterlife. But he comes to identify with Jefferson and his need to achieve a sense of his own self-dignity, and this task becomes part of his own quest....more
Sean
(Review taken from National Endowment for the Arts' website. --SR)

Ernest J. Gaines's A Lesson Before Dying (1993) poses one of the most universal questions literature can ask: Knowing we're going to die, how should we live? It's the story of an uneducated young black man named Jefferson, accused of the murder of a white storekeeper, and Grant Wiggins, a college-educated native son of Louisiana, who teaches at a plantation school. In a little more than 250 pages, these two men named for president...more
Jessica Ng
What caught my eye is that this book had the Oprah Book Club logo on the cover. The title, A Lesson Before Dying is also something that caught my attention. The book starts off with 3 black men who are going to the liquor store. Two black men start arguing with the store owner and then they started shooting. Everyone died except the only man left, Jefferson. He stayed in the store while police arrested him and he was then tried for murder. Grant Wiggins tries to help Jefferson with his case, how...more
Debbie
Set in the fictional town of Bayonne, Louisiana in the late 1940s. Two African American men, proundly different, are both struggling to be men in a racist society.

Uneducated Jefferson witnesses the murder of a white storekeeper during a robbery. The perpetrators are also killed, and Jefferson is put on trial for murder. In Jefferson's defense, his lawyer says not that Jefferson is innocent, but that killing him would be like slaughtering a hog. The all white jury is not swayed by this argument...more
Pgao
Jan 05, 2009 Pgao rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: People who have low self-esteem.
It is a great book just like the cover said. In page 223. the part that Wiggins discussed God with Jefferson, it is pretty powerful.
"I think it's God that makes people care for people, Jefferson. I think it's God makes children play and people sing. I believe it's God that brings loved ones togethere. I believe it's God that makes trees bud and food grow out of the earth."
As one can see in the previous part of the book, Wiggins had abandon his religious belief, even in the discussion with Rever...more
Erin
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Marsha
To be honest, reading African/American literature makes me a little uncomfortable. Maybe Germans who read about the holocaust feel the same way--it is appalling and disgusting how blacks have been treated by whites. I am helpless to change what has happened, and is still happening, in some communities and so I hate to have to face it. Anyway, to the book. The narrator is a twenty-something black teacher who has returned to the plantation he grew up on to teach in the segregated black school. It...more
June Ahern
I gave this book a five star because of the way I was deeply touched by the story and characters. It is authentic portrait of human failings, hopes and the ability to rise above adversities.

In the week I have finished it, I find myself reflecting back on the characters and their pain and with anger, upon their prejudices.

The story is set in a small Cajun community in Louisiana in the late 1940s. Jefferson, a young black man, is in the wrong place at the wrong time. He is involved in a liquor sto...more
Rebecca Johnson
My 17 year-old son read this book and it left an impression on him. The book got a 4 in my eyes for several reasons...

Things I didn't like:
1. I think in today's society...Jefferson would have been found guilty whether he was white or black. He was with the guys who committed murder and he subsequently stole money out of the cash register. I am not sure what society was like back then exactly, but I am pretty sure that a white boy would have gotten found guilty as well in these circumstances. So,...more
Khaya
I wavered between three and four stars because this book was a slow starter, ponderous for the first half to two thirds of the story. The last section made up for that, though, so it's going to be four stars in the final analysis.

Grant, the main character, is an African-American schoolteacher in Jim Crow 1940s Louisiana. Grant lives with his aunt and feels frustrated and stifled in his job, in no small part because of the uphill battle he must fight just for chalk. The one bright spot in his lif...more
Bradley Boatman
"A Lesson Before Dying" is a book I was supposed to read Junior year of high school, but I never actually finished it because I was busy. So, last summer (between 1st and 2nd years of college) I decided to start it again. I found the book to be enjoyable. It opened up my eyes to the fact that even after slavery was abolished, African Americans were not free. The plot of the book was believable and moving. I felt a constant frustration around most of the characters, however. I could not get over...more
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Born to a sharecropping family, Ernest Gaines was picking cotton in the fields by age nine and only attended school five or six months a year. When he was fifteen, he moved to California to join his mother who had relocated during World War II, and began writing. He attended San Francisco State University, served in the army, and won a writing fellowship to Stanford University. Gaines has been a M...more
More about Ernest J. Gaines...
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“I want you to show them the difference between what they think you are and what you can be.” 46 people liked it
“I have no more to say except this: We must live with our own conscience.” 23 people liked it
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