The Third Life of Grange Copeland
β Scribed by Walker, Alice
- Book ID
- 106978695
- Publisher
- Phoenix Press
- Year
- 1970
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 0156028360
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Review
"Alice Walker is a lavishly gifted writer."--The New York Times Book Review
"Almost no one has tried to tell us about the early lives, the INNER early lives of Black people.... Alice Walker is a storyteller." -- Robert Coles, The New Yorker
"Alice Walker is exceptionally brave, and takes on subjects at which most writers would flinch and quail..." -- Alice Adams, The San Francisco Chronicle
"Walker dares to reveal truths about men and women, about blacks and whites, about God and love.... And we, like Alice Walker's marvelous characters, come away transformed by knowledge and love but most of all by wonder." --Essence
About the Author
Best-selling novelist ALICE WALKER is the author of five other novels, five collections of short stories, six collections of essays, seven volumes of poetry, including the most recent Hard Times Require Furious Dancing, and several childrenβs books. Her books have been translated into more than two dozen languages.
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### Review "Alice Walker is a lavishly gifted writer."--The New York Times Book Review "Almost no one has tried to tell us about the early lives, the INNER early lives of Black people.... Alice Walker is a storyteller." -- Robert Coles, The New Yorker "Alice Walker is exceptionally brave, a
"In a story of compassion and grace, a black tenant farmer in Georgia follows a harrowing destiny. Despondent over the futility of life in the South, George Copeland leaves his wife and son in Georgia to head North. After meeting an equally humiliating experience there, he returns to Georgia years l
**The highly acclaimed first two novels by the Pulitzer Prizeβwinning author of *The Color Purple* and "a lavishly gifted writer" (*The New York Times Book Review*).** The first African American woman to win a Pulitzer Prize in 1983 for *The Color Purple*βwhich also won the National Book Awar
In one lifetime we have many chances to get it right Grange Copeland, a deeply conflicted and struggling tenant farmer in the Deep South of the 1930s, leaves his family and everything he's ever known to find happiness and respect in the cold cities of the North. This misadventure, his "second life,"