Editors Reads
Literary FictionHistorical Fiction

Alice Walker

American · b. 1944

4 books reviewed Avg rating 4.3 / 5Top rating 4.7 / 5

Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (1983), National Book Award (1983)

Alice Walker is an American novelist, poet, and activist whose Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Color Purple gave voice to Black women's experience with unflinching honesty and compassion.

Alice Walker grew up in rural Georgia during the era of segregation and went on to become one of the most important American writers of the twentieth century. She was a central figure in the Black Arts Movement and coined the term “womanism” to describe a strand of feminism rooted in the experience of women of color. Her writing is inseparable from her politics, but at its best it transcends polemic to become something much more lasting.

The Color Purple is her masterpiece. Told entirely in letters — first written by Celie to God, later exchanged with her sister Nettie — it chronicles the life of a Black woman in the rural South in the early twentieth century: the abuse she endures, the friendships and loves that sustain her, and the long, hard journey toward self-possession and joy. The epistolary form is used with great skill; Celie’s voice — in a nonstandard dialect that Walker renders with care and precision — is one of the most distinctive in American fiction. The novel is often devastating, but Walker refuses to end in tragedy.

Walker’s later career and public persona have attracted controversy — including statements that have drawn criticism from Jewish groups and others — which has complicated her legacy for some readers. Her fiction, however, stands on its own terms. The Color Purple is a work of moral and artistic seriousness that earns every one of its accolades.

4 Books Reviewed

The Color Purple book cover
Bestseller

The Color Purple

by Alice Walker

4.7

Through letters — to God and to her sister — Celie chronicles her life of abuse in rural Georgia, her transformation through Shug Avery's love, and her gradual discovery of her own power.

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Meridian book cover

Meridian

by Alice Walker

4.2

Meridian Hill, a young Black woman from Georgia, gives up her child and her education to join the civil rights movement, and spends years questioning whether violence is ever justified in the service of justice. Walker's most politically direct novel — a nonlinear account of the movement and its costs.

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Possessing the Secret of Joy book cover
4.1

Tashi, the African woman who appeared briefly in The Color Purple, undergoes female genital mutilation as an act of cultural solidarity and spends the rest of her life dealing with the trauma, eventually killing the woman who performed the procedure. Walker's most confrontational novel — a direct political act about female genital cutting as a cultural and feminist issue.

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The Temple of My Familiar book cover
4.0

A loose sequel to The Color Purple following several characters — including an aged spirit named Miss Lissie who remembers multiple past lives — through a meditation on African and African American history, gender, and spiritual continuity. Walker's most ambitious and most polarizing novel.

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