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Kingsolver's new book5/7/2023 ![]() She represented a particular brand of woke, middle-aged white lady, serving up the novelistic equivalent of low-cal comfort food: I can’t believe it’s not Franzen! As Dickens showed us, morally charged novels can endure for generations. ![]() ![]() And this was before she went full-on environmental crusader in books like Prodigal Summer and Flight Behavior.įor a long time, Kingsolver was accepted critically as a social realist, come to lure in readers with “fiction rich in empathy, wit and science” and convert them one by one. He found her work so reverential of liberal sentiment, so much in awe of the plights of the disenfranchised, that it “place the supremely empathetic author in a protected niche, far beyond the reader’s capacity to criticize.” In other words, Kingsolver just cares so, so deeply for the world that you’d have to be a monster, or at least a little gauche, to rip her for shoddy prose or flat characters. In a long, mildly unhinged 1999 essay on Barbara Kingsolver’s career-cementing novel, The Poisonwood Bible, critic Lee Siegel canonized the author as “the most successful practitioner of a style in contemporary fiction that might be called Nice Writing.” It wasn’t a compliment. ![]()
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