A review by cepbreed
Tar Baby by Toni Morrison

slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

I'm very happy to have finally read a book by Toni Morrison and decided for myself that she deserves all the praise she gets and more. Even though I've heard she wrote novels much better than Tar Baby I loved this book. Taking a folktale and adapting it in an indirect way was such a brilliant premise. Morrison has an amazing mind for connecting details to each other and created intrigue from the get go. Her characters are all dynamic and real. I found Margaret particularly compelling. This woman was a trophy was Valerian, his Maine born red haired pageant queen. At first it seems like she won, getting to marry a rich man with a home on a tropical island, but beneath the shallows of their marriage she was deeply unhappy. A woman pushed into a box, never allowed to be a girl. I'm not trying to justify any of her actions but
the way she abused Michael as a baby was so foreign to me. Morrison describes the abuse in a way that finally made Margaret human. She needed someone to see her and Valerian never did that for her. Another moment of Margaret's that made me halt in my tracks was the discussion she has with Ondine long after the dinner party. Margaret complains about their cold relationship and blames Ondine for not stopping her abuse of Michael. She says Ondine was older and therefore responsible for her actions. Ondine responds "I wasn't thirty-five. I was twenty-three. A girl. Just like you." SHE ATE HER UPPPPP!!
  As much as Margaret has felt pained she only acknowledges herself as a victim. 

Definitely going to read more Toni Morrison on my own time.

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