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10 Reviews
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting read,
By Aphrael (Tempe, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
The stories in this book cover just about everything from tales of alligator men to torrid love affairs. They provide a lot of insight into African American culture and history, and are even written in dialect. The forward included in this edition really helped me understand what I was reading when I started the book. Some of the stories are a little confusing though, because they are printed in two different versions in this book. There's a glossary of slang which is also really helpful. I'd reccomend it for anyone who's a fan of folklore or African American history or literature.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
African American Folklore with the classic Hurston Flavor,
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
These legends, folk tales, poems, and short stories, spendidly told, created and rewritten by Hurston, beautifully illustrate the pathos, passion and pleasure of the African American existence.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Black folklore from Ground Zero,
By Andre M. "brnn64" (Mt. Pleasant, SC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
Prior to Zora Neale Hurston, the rich well of black folklore was laargely written by white writers such as Joel Chandler Harris and Roark Bradford among others, with varying degrees of accuracy. Most literate and educated blacks were too ashamed of their folk cutlure to write about it until ZNH came on the scene.
This is a fine collection of some of her best short fiction. "John Redding Goes to Sea," written during her college days, accurately describes the life of an intelligent young black man feeling trapped by the illiteracy around him. "The EatonVille Anthology" is a rich collection of anecdotes about her hometown of Eatonville, Fla. "Drenched in Light" is about a free-spirited young black girl and her exasperated mother. "The Bone of Contention" is an old handed-down folklore that inspired her aborted play with Langston Hughes MULE BONE. I could go on and on, but collections like this are of vital importance since Black folklore and stroytelling is in danger of being a dying art form. Read and keep the flame alive.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Zora's works,
By Norma F. Gillespie "Women's Literature Buff" (Seminole, Oklahoma United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
You won't be able to put this book down as you get into her story-telling. A movie was made of "Their Eyes Were Watching God"--a captivating short novel. She's hilarious and serious at the same time. Some of her stories are autobiographical.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
the complete stories,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Complete Stories (P.S.) (Paperback)
Incredible! this is a great historical view from a colored women. If you enjoy american Southern History, You will love this book
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable,
By Big Sistah Patty (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Stories (P.S.) (Paperback)
I enjoyed the variety of short stories. My favorites are "The Gilded Six Bits and Their Eyes Are Watching God. My favorite passage from the Gilded Six Bits: "One night Joe came back home around midnight & complained of pains in the back. He asked Missie to rub him down with liniment. It had been three months since Missie had touched his body(her husband caught her in bed with another mad - Big Sistahs note) and it all seemed strange. But she rubbed him. Grateful chance. Before morning youth triumphed and Missie exulted." What a lovely way to say they had relations - Big Sistha Pat Their Eyes Are Watching God I simply love this book. I love the language. It is so poetic. The following passages stood out for me: "Naw. We been tuhgether round two years. If you kin see de light at day break, you don't keer if you die at dust. It's so many people never, seen de light at all. Ah wuz fumblin' round and God opened de door." This passage for me is so beautiful and true. So many people die having not experienced real love. Big Sistah Pat. "The monstropolous beast had left his bed. The two hundred miles an hour wind had lose his chains. He seized hold of his dikes and ran forward until he met the quarters; uprooted them like grass and rushed on after his supposed-to-be conquerors, rolling the dikes, rolling the houses, rolling the people in the houses a long with other timbers. The sea was walking the earth with a heavy heel." "De lake is comin
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
great anthology,
By
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
This was a great book. You should read it before reading Their Eyes were Watching God, it really helps you understand her style of writing.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Zora Neal Hurston is an American Icon,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Complete Stories (Paperback)
If you have never read any of Zora Neal Hurston's works I recommend you try this book. Ms. Hurston wrote in what others term the "Harlem Renaissance" and her writings are a very unique and insightful portrayal into the internal issues facing Black Americans at this point in time. It is a very touching and insightful portrayal from a different perspective but is as all-American as Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer" novel. Definitely worth the read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hurston's Complete Stories,
By Effie P.M. Simmonds (SEBRING, FLORIDA, US) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Complete Stories (P.S.) (Paperback)
A profound and very instructive rendering of the moral and spiritual values of black folks. The strength and beauty of the language and the culture
resonates powerfully such that the ultimate victory over pain and untold atrocities makes the journey worthwhile.
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Could have been better,
By Cosmoetica "cosmoeticadotcom" (New York, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Stories (P.S.) (Paperback)
Isaac Bashevis Singer with a tan....and breasts. That's what I was thinking of Zora Neale Hurston as I read her Complete Stories, except she's not as good a writer nor tale teller. Or, perhaps a less skilled Sherwood Anderson. There is a sense one gets when reading these tales that Hurston was born too late. Had she been born several centuries earlier she may have been right at home writing didactic cultural tales along the lines of the Decameron or the Mabinogion. Perhaps the most fully realized story in the collection is the first one, John Redding Goes To Sea, in which a restive youth ends up getting his lifelong wish of going to sea fulfilled, but only posthumously, as a corpse flooded out in a swollen river. Here's a sample of the best of Hurston, metaphorically and musically:
Perhaps ten-year-old John was puzzling to the simple folk there in the Florida woods for he was an imaginative child and fond of day-dreams. The St. John River flowed a scarce three hundred feet from his back door. On its banks at this point grow numerous palms, luxuriant magnolias and bay trees with a dense undergrowth of ferns, cat-tails; and rope-grass. On the bosom of the stream float millions of delicately colored hyacinths. The little brown boy loved to wander down to the water's edge, and, casting in dry twigs, watch them sail away down stream to Jacksonville, the sea, the wide world and John Redding wanted to follow them. Sometimes in his dreams he was a prince, riding away in a gorgeous carriage. Often he was a knight bestride a fiery charger prancing down the white shell road that led to distant lands. At other times he was a steamboat captain piloting his craft down the St. John River to where the sky seemed to touch the water. No matter what he dreamed or who he fancied himself to be, he always ended by riding away to the horizon; for in his childish ignorance he thought this to be farthest land. That is excellent writing. Other stories lack the almost Serlingesque irony of that tale, in favor of didacticism, which while not necessarily a bad thing, can be too much in large doses within a tale, as well as reading too many didactic stories back to back....Which brings me to the Introduction by Gates, a man who is not a writer by profession, but a student of history. While this may qualify him to speak of Hurston in historical terms his stoop-kneed assessments of these flawed tales is saccharine and void of understanding. He lauds her destruction of potentially thought provoking material into lowest common denominator ends and shows he hasn't a clue as to what constitutes a successful narrative and a one dimensional characterization. He calls simple tales complex and points to things outside the stories, themselves, as having relevance, even though the tales do not manifest it. The only reason I point this out is the length and depth of the Introduction, and the fact that many of these ideas are regurged uncritically by young writers- white or black- who study these tales. That said, I only wonder what Hurston might have accomplished at a later date, when there would be no pressures to change her tales- or would there be? Would she have succumbed to the fashionable PC track? Would her tales have been even more simplistic, and even more dependent upon the trite black dialect? That said, her tales have an undeniable music and poetry in their sounds, but their intellectual content is often nil. In a sense, one might consider these tales mere apprentice work for her novels, but, then, why put out this many of them in differing forms? A book of the eight or ten best tales, a Selected rather than Collected or Complete edition, would have been far more effective in highlighting her strengths and uniquities as a writer. Unfortunately, this book does the opposite, portraying Hurston as, especially in light of later black writers, rather generic, and little more than a talented Romantic, at best, and a bodice-ripping romance writer, at worst. Oy! |
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The Complete Stories by Zora Neale Hurston (Paperback - January 5, 1996)
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