I
admit that I haven't read a whole lot of Toni Morrison, not because I
didn't want to, but because MY
TBR SHELF IS SO SO SO SO CROWDED. You
understand what I mean.
I
did read Beloved
twice, though, and was knocked on my butt both times, not
surprisingly. Not having read any of her more recent work, though,
allowed me to come to God
Help the Child
without many preconcieved notions.
First
of all, this slim novel (just under 200 pages) is disturbing. Very,
very disturbing. It's main focus is on the mental and physical
suffering caused by child molestation. Many of the characters in this
story are either victims or molesters (including a wrongly-accused
one), and after you finish reading, you'll feel like you just watched
several SVU
episodes back-to-back and you'll feel accordingly disgusted with
everything.
I suppose the bigger picture in GHTC is the impact that adults in general have on children and how the latter are inevitably shaped by (for better or worse) the home lives and family members they were destined to grow up with. And yet, cruelty and sexual violence seem to be Morrison's main theme, as if she's trying to understand just how the most innocent among us can be the targets of the cruelest.
Told
from several different perspectives, GHTC
revolves mostly around Lula Ann ("Bride") who testified as
a young girl against a teacher accused of molesting several students
(turns out, Bride only did this to make her mother proud and get her
mother to notice her, for once). Despite the years that have passed
and Bride's successful job with a makeup company, she tries to
apologize to the woman who was released after 15 years in prison. The
beating that Bride receives at this woman's hands leads to Bride's
breakup with her boyfriend Booker, whose own family was nearly
wrecked by his older brother's rape and murder.
Along with Bride's story, we learn about Booker's trauma and how the
pain has shaped his life; we learn about the wrongly-accused
teacher's deadened soul after years in prison; we hear from Bride's
mother about her disgust at having given birth to such a black child
when she and Bride's father were so light-skinned. All Bride ever
wanted, since she was born, was so be touched and loved by her mother
(her father abandoned them at her birth), and her mother's withdrawal
of affection tormented Bride until she was willing to do anything to
be loved. Morrison brings together the themes of love, sexual
attraction, sexual violence, and cruelty to make us think more about
how our own desires have shaped us.
And
yet, GHTC
ends too quickly, leaving too many loose ends. One of the most
interesting developments, in my opinion, is Bride's bizarre physical
regression when Booker leaves her. Between the breakup and Bride's
search for him (in order to demand an explanation), she finds her
body becoming that of a pre-adolescent's (even though she is in her
early thirties(?)). This touch of magical realism that marks many of
Morrison's books is never fully explored, and I was very disappointed
by that. Nonetheless, I'd recommend GHTC
to any and all Morrison fans, and I'm going to go read the rest of
her books.
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