Community Reviews
Background: The book's narrative is told by an elderly and ailing Congregationalist pastor who lost his first wife and child during labour. He remarried very late in life to a much younger woman. He is now 76 years old and with a 7-year-old son who he realizes he will not see grow to his teens or adulthood.
Plot/Premise: Gilead is largely plotless. This book takes the form of a letter from the narrator to his young son about his life and his observations on things around him. The letter is written in a non-chronological way. The present is small-town Iowa in 1956 but his reflections span a century back to the U.S. Civil War which his own grandfather participated in. The last third of the story often veers away from the narrator's own life and his messages to his son and spends some time focusing on Jack Boughtonâs (the narrator's 43-year-old godson) and his observations of Jack from boyhood through to present.
Analysis: Major literary reviewers and the Pulitzer committee found the prose to be measured and thoughtful and they appreciated its philosophical musings. I didn't mind the jumping around in timeline back-and-forth from present to the time of the narrator's grandfather, the time of his father and the various stages of the narrator's life that occur with little discernible sequence. This aspect didn't cause confusion. I found the first two-thirds of the book to be mostly uninteresting personal reflections that you might expect a lonely older person to inflict on a listener who felt it rude to avoid. The opening two thirds included too few broader insights into life and I could only see myself being interested if the narrator had been my own ancestor. Another drawback: the book makes dozens (it felt like hundreds) of direct and indirect references to the narratorâs expected demise in the near termâ far, far more repetition than necessary on this point. Fortunately, the final third of the book manages to make more general observations on life that were sometimes interesting and worthwhile. Readers who don't care for regular discourses into aspects of Christianity may find the book less palatable than readers who welcome the topic.
Plot/Premise: Gilead is largely plotless. This book takes the form of a letter from the narrator to his young son about his life and his observations on things around him. The letter is written in a non-chronological way. The present is small-town Iowa in 1956 but his reflections span a century back to the U.S. Civil War which his own grandfather participated in. The last third of the story often veers away from the narrator's own life and his messages to his son and spends some time focusing on Jack Boughtonâs (the narrator's 43-year-old godson) and his observations of Jack from boyhood through to present.
Analysis: Major literary reviewers and the Pulitzer committee found the prose to be measured and thoughtful and they appreciated its philosophical musings. I didn't mind the jumping around in timeline back-and-forth from present to the time of the narrator's grandfather, the time of his father and the various stages of the narrator's life that occur with little discernible sequence. This aspect didn't cause confusion. I found the first two-thirds of the book to be mostly uninteresting personal reflections that you might expect a lonely older person to inflict on a listener who felt it rude to avoid. The opening two thirds included too few broader insights into life and I could only see myself being interested if the narrator had been my own ancestor. Another drawback: the book makes dozens (it felt like hundreds) of direct and indirect references to the narratorâs expected demise in the near termâ far, far more repetition than necessary on this point. Fortunately, the final third of the book manages to make more general observations on life that were sometimes interesting and worthwhile. Readers who don't care for regular discourses into aspects of Christianity may find the book less palatable than readers who welcome the topic.
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