#43885
Mentioned in 3 episodes

Sula

Book • 1973
Published in 1973, 'Sula' by Toni Morrison is a novel that delves into the intricate and often fraught relationship between two childhood friends, Sula Peace and Nel Wright, growing up in the African American community of the Bottom in Ohio.

The narrative explores themes of friendship, identity, freedom, and the consequences of societal expectations.

Sula, who challenges traditional norms and lives a life of independence, and Nel, who opts for a conventional life as a wife and mother, find their bond tested by a tragic incident and later by Sula's affair with Nel's husband.

The novel questions the terms 'good' and 'evil', highlighting the ambiguity and complexity of human relationships and the impact of societal judgments.

Through the characters' experiences, Morrison examines issues of motherhood, black masculinity, and the constraints faced by black people in a small-town environment.

Mentioned by

Mentioned in 3 episodes

Mentioned by Tim Harford, quoting a passage from her novel Sula that reflects on the meaning of life and the lack of need for external validation.
FT Weekend: The stories we tell, with Elif Shafak
Mentioned by Suzanne Rust , who describes a positive encounter with her at a luncheon.
The Moth Podcast: Meeting Your Idols
Recommended by Paul Butler as one of his favorite books by Toni Morrison.
A former prosecutor's case for prison abolition
Mentioned as the book that spellbound the speaker towards the anthology's close.
How Toni Morrison Changed Publishing
Mentioned by Tim Harford, quoting a passage from her novel Sula about the meaning of life and legacy.
FT Weekend: The stories we tell, with Elif Shafak
Mentioned as one of Toni Morrison's first two novels that Hooks wrote her dissertation on.
HAP 128 - Marginal Comments - bell hooks and Patricia Hill Collins

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