Literary Award Winners Fiction Book Club discussion

Gilead (Gilead, #1)
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Past Reads > Gilead - Through the End

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message 1: by Tamara (new) - added it

Tamara (tamaracat) | 152 comments Mod
This is a place to discuss the entire novel of Gilead by Marilyn Robinson. Please place spoilers under a spoiler tag like so... (< spoiler> < / spoiler> with the spaces removed.


message 2: by Kamil (last edited Dec 23, 2013 01:07PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kamil (coveredinskin) | 93 comments Finally I reached the end, what a hard journey it was. The hardest I’ve taken this year, one of the hardest ever. Let’s start from the beginning though.

The book is a letter, being written by dying reverend to his 7 years old son. I liked the idea, didn’t like the execution much. It lacks trajectory, what seemed at the beginning as a interesting (although not innovative, e.g. Iron Age, Coetzee and many others) idea turned into dull, going back and forth, stream of consciousness that made me crawl through pages, basically through the whole book.

No denying there is a great deal of warmth, intelligence and realism regarding importance of human relations, however due to almost absolute lack of plot for most of the parts and overwhelming amount of scripture and Christian theology very often of purely academic nature I found it heavy and uninteresting. It was very unbalanced, academic, theological parts absolutely dominate the book, overshadow the story in it, and I just don’t’ find them neither thought provoking enough nor touching, to make up for that.

I really enjoyed the last 50 pages, when the plot came up to life and it was human and beautiful. I would give it 4,5 if I was rating only last 50 pages and small, insightful parts that happened from time to time, however most of the time I was struggling unprecedented. I kept on going though, because I knew that once put down for something else to read, it would probably never got back in my hands.


Ashley I'm on page 179 and finally the book is getting easier to read. I still really don't like anything about this book, but at least I'm close to being finished.


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm done and rereading certain pearls of wisdom in my journal. Will update , getting ready for Christmas. This book was a priceless Gem! Loved it.


Ashley I finally finished this book last night. I found this book to be incredibly dull and painful to get through. The last 50 pages or so were the easiest to read and the most enjoyable. To me this book is incredibly overrated.


message 6: by Kamil (last edited Dec 25, 2013 03:25AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kamil (coveredinskin) | 93 comments I would have to agree as for overrated and painful to get through. Don't get the hype at all.


مرجان محمدی (marjanmohammadi) I have translated this book to Persian. Please be patient with this book you may find it a real gem. Not all the books are written for entertaining. The words are chosen so carefully to carry the meaning. I love this book and I love all the books by Marilynne Robinson.


message 8: by Tamara (new) - added it

Tamara (tamaracat) | 152 comments Mod
I have the complete opposite reaction to Kamil upon finishing this book. I much preferred the first 200 pages of the book to the last 50. I rally enjoyed the rambling and would get lost in it, not really noticing that the book was lacking plot, but it almost read like a memoir. I thought the last 50 pages were a desperate plea for a plot driven book and a need to make up for what some readers probably feel it lacked throughout. Personally, being one to ramble a bit myself, and a lover of storytelling regardless if there is a plot, moral, or other aim, I truly enjoyed this book. I'll be posting some of my favorite quotes later on.


message 9: by [deleted user] (new)

My experience mirrored Tamara's comments on the Gilead , specifically the marking of enjoying the initial 200 pages, however, like all books being subjective and relating to you individually, that is what made Gilead such an incredible read for me.
Interestingly , I, looked up the meaning of the title because it was an unusual word, yet familiar and finally was drawn to the conclusion that it's definition means "Promised Land". The first 200 pages were filled with incredible wisdom and pearls of advice, the narrator's love of books etc and especially remarks on our humanity. It brought a sense of areas to my personhood and helped me understand wonders and themes that were like a marble rolling around in my head , finally finding a slot or hole to affix to. Whether it was a Bible verse or how he felt like (view spoiler)


Kamil (coveredinskin) | 93 comments As Lisa said sometimes it's up to your personality while other times it's up to your mood or combination of both.

Last part that I enjoyed the most was very close home, in a sense I knew it from somewhere, the trouble,outcast son in the sixties/seventies marring a black woman and having a kid with her coming back home to share it with his folks. I felt like I've seen it, exactly the same story, I was so sure that I even started looking for trailer at youtube, to see if Gilead was filmed and if I haven't seen it already.


message 11: by Tamara (new) - added it

Tamara (tamaracat) | 152 comments Mod
Kamil, I think it's great that you related to the end story personally. It was really touching and I appreciated how we got to see some humanization of previously elusive characters.


message 12: by Tamara (new) - added it

Tamara (tamaracat) | 152 comments Mod
Laura Jean wrote: "Finished listening to Gilead today. In truth, I am in awe. The development of father/son relationships, ames & his father; ames'father & his father; ames & his grandfather; ames & hi..."

Love this comment! Love how you took the bread as a symbol of life and removed it from the religious sense and recognized the familial sense. Really great observation.

I bet it was great to listen to, since for me it read a lot like someone speaking.

Thanks for reading and sharing!


message 13: by Rick (new) - rated it 5 stars

Rick (williarw) I really liked this book. I found it poignant and it was relevant to my current life (losing aged loved ones).


message 14: by Jenn (new) - rated it 5 stars

Jenn | 1 comments This book is just so beautifully written. It's character and idea driven, rather than plot driven. I found myself copying out sentences and paragraphs just to savor them. For that reason, it wasn't a quick read, but was well worth every moment I spent with it. I could hear John Ames voice in my head and grieved that he was fictional.

I do understand that this book won't be for everyone. The quiet, sparse prose demands a certain patience from the reader. Many of the ideas have a theological basis, so that may be a turn off to some. However, the humble awe Rev. Ames has for the gift of life's joys and struggles is profound to me. This book made me slow down and contemplate and for that I am grateful.


message 15: by Tamara (new) - added it

Tamara (tamaracat) | 152 comments Mod
Jenn wrote: "This book made me slow down and contemplate and for that I am grateful. "

Me too, Jenn. I definitely took away the message that it's important to take notice of even the little things in life. And also, to write down your own history, because once you're gone, you can't share that anymore.


message 16: by Cat (new) - rated it 5 stars

Cat | 28 comments I just finished reading Gilead. I'm left with a calm sense of peace. This book was a sort of balm for me. It felt so soothing to let the words wash over me. I enjoyed the theological parts, because so little of my life is religious anymore.

I really identified with Boughton when he said, "I am in a state of categorical unbelief. I don't even believe God doesn't exist, if you see what I mean." I am a half-hearted agnostic and it's exhausting to keep up this level of cynicism. So many times I've just wanted to believe in something that could give me some comfort. It was comforting to listen to this preacher, to suspend my disbelief, to see joy, love, grief and death, through a Christian lens, if only for the length of the novel.
As an aside, apparently Obama mentioned Gilead as one of his favorite books.


message 17: by Cat (new) - rated it 5 stars

Cat | 28 comments I just typed up my favorite quotes from the book and realized how deeply this book actually affected me when I got teary eyed, thinking about how he won't get to see his child grow up. I'm typing this now with my 19 month old son asleep in the other room, realizing that I probably won't live to see him grow to be an old man. This is my time with him. Here. Now.

Here are a couple of my favorites about that sense of being in the moment with your child.

"Sometimes now when you crawl into my lap and settle against me and I feel that light, quick strength of your body and the weightiness of your head, when you're cold from playing in the sprinkler or warm from your bath at night, and you lie in my arms...and tell me what you've been thinking about...I imagine your child self finding me in heaven and jumping into my arms and there is a great joy in the thought...Adulthood is a wonderful thing, and brief. You must be sure to enjoy it while it lasts.”

"Why do I love the thought of you old? That first twinge of arthiritis in your knee is a thing I imagine with all the tenderness I felt when you showed me your loose tooth...I wish I could help you carry the weight of many years. But the Lord will have that fatherly satisfaction."


Irene | 651 comments I read this book a few years ago. I neither loved nor disliked it. I did think it was a bit over rated. The wisdom it contained did not strike me as particularly profound or novel. The rambling recalling of memories became tiresome after a while. I needed breaks, I think. At the same time, I found the voice to be authentic and enjoyed the way characters were revealed as they grew over time. Personally, I thought Housekeeping was heads and shoulders better than Gilead.


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