All Souls' Rising
ALL SOULS' RISING
by Madison Smartt Bell
Nominations: Dublin Longlist 1997, National Book Finalist 1995, PEN/Faulkner Finalist 1996
Date Read: March 17, 2020
I started All Souls' Rising with an open mind, interested in Haitain culture and the slave uprising. All I can say is that I endured this book. I found some parts of it fascinating, some parts so brutal I wanted to quit, and some parts confusing. At times I felt like this novel meandered to the point of pointlessness.
Further impeding my enjoyment was there was no real attachment between the characters. There was some loyalty, some sex but none of the individuals displayed overt emotion. There were touching moments between fathers and children but nothing I could sink my teeth into.
The complexities of the French influence on the uprising were somewhat lost on me. Although I did appreciate that humans treated with cruelty learn to be cruel. The brutality with which the blacks treated their captured white slaveowners was not novel. It was behavior they had witnessed and learned. I can understand the impulse for revenge but after a while I just wanted all the violence and chaos to stop. Can't humans do better than this?
All in, I suppose I'm glad I read this but it's not a title I would reach for again.
by Madison Smartt Bell
Nominations: Dublin Longlist 1997, National Book Finalist 1995, PEN/Faulkner Finalist 1996
Date Read: March 17, 2020
I started All Souls' Rising with an open mind, interested in Haitain culture and the slave uprising. All I can say is that I endured this book. I found some parts of it fascinating, some parts so brutal I wanted to quit, and some parts confusing. At times I felt like this novel meandered to the point of pointlessness.
Further impeding my enjoyment was there was no real attachment between the characters. There was some loyalty, some sex but none of the individuals displayed overt emotion. There were touching moments between fathers and children but nothing I could sink my teeth into.
The complexities of the French influence on the uprising were somewhat lost on me. Although I did appreciate that humans treated with cruelty learn to be cruel. The brutality with which the blacks treated their captured white slaveowners was not novel. It was behavior they had witnessed and learned. I can understand the impulse for revenge but after a while I just wanted all the violence and chaos to stop. Can't humans do better than this?
All in, I suppose I'm glad I read this but it's not a title I would reach for again.
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