Beloved - : 10 Things You Didn't Know
Beloved - : 10 Things You Didn't Know
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Beloved is the Pulitzer Prize-winning story of a family literally haunted by slavery and its cruelties.
Published in 1987, the book earned Toni Morrison the Pulitzer Prize in 1988 and was called in a New York
Times poll of 200 critics, editors, and writers, "the single best work of American fiction published in the
last twenty-five years."
The novel, with its descriptions of humiliation and spiritual rejuvenation, has generated controversy as
well as fervent admiration. The fact that it has been banned or challenged in schools and libraries around
the United States attests to the strength of its storytelling and its effect on readers.
7. Morrison was the first black woman to receive the Nobel Prize in
Literature.
Morrison won the prize in 1993 which carried a monetary award of $825,000. In a telephone interview,
Morrison was honored by the prize, saying:
Regardless of what we all say and truly believe about the irrelevance of prizes and their relationship to
the real work, nevertheless this is a signal honor for me.
10. Among her literary prizes, Morrison also received the French
Legion of Honor in 2010.
She was awarded the medal by the French Culture Minister Fréderic Mitterrand who called her "the
greatest American novelist of her time. He also praised her by saying, "You were the first woman writer to
tell the painful history of Afro-Americans ... You're 'beloved.'"