From an acclaimed scholar and longtime friend of Toni Morrison, an intimate and searching account of the life and the art of one of our greatest and most prophetic writers
Few critics have mapped the terrain of Black American literature and culture with the range, rigor, and moral seriousness of Farah Griffin. Now she brings her full intellectual force to bear — offering a gem of literary compression that captures the essence of an extraordinary life journey, the indelible work it produced, and the lessons it holds for us still.
Moving gracefully between biography, literary criticism, and memoir, Griffin traces Morrison's journey from Lorain, Ohio, to Howard and Cornell, from single mother and trailblazing editor at Random House to Nobel Laureate and global moral voice. Along the way, she reveals the fierce intelligence, discipline, humor, and uncompromising vision that shaped Morrison's art and her life.
Threaded throughout is a powerful exploration of Morrison's enduring themes—ruins and renewal, memory and prophecy, patriarchy and love—and the ways they illuminate America's past and present. Griffin writes both as a preeminent scholar of Morrison's work and one of our most searching critics of Black American literature and culture. The result is both a major reassessment of Morrison's legacy and a testament to mentorship, intellectual kinship, and shared vocation.
The Seer is a book about how a great writer is formed, how she shapes a nation's imagination, and how, even amid fracture, she shows us how to build again.
From an acclaimed scholar and longtime friend of Toni Morrison, an intimate and searching account of the life and the art of one of our greatest and most prophetic writers
Few critics have mapped the terrain of Black American literature and culture with the range, rigor, and moral seriousness of Farah Griffin. Now she brings her full intellectual force to bear — offering a gem of literary compression that captures the essence of an extraordinary life journey, the indelible work it produced, and the lessons it holds for us still.
Moving gracefully between biography, literary criticism, and memoir, Griffin traces Morrison's journey from Lorain, Ohio, to Howard and Cornell, from single mother and trailblazing editor at Random House to Nobel Laureate and global moral voice. Along the way, she reveals the fierce intelligence, discipline, humor, and uncompromising vision that shaped Morrison's art and her life.
Threaded throughout is a powerful exploration of Morrison's enduring themes—ruins and renewal, memory and prophecy, patriarchy and love—and the ways they illuminate America's past and present. Griffin writes both as a preeminent scholar of Morrison's work and one of our most searching critics of Black American literature and culture. The result is both a major reassessment of Morrison's legacy and a testament to mentorship, intellectual kinship, and shared vocation.
The Seer is a book about how a great writer is formed, how she shapes a nation's imagination, and how, even amid fracture, she shows us how to build again.