Books Magazine

Book Review: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

By Joyweesemoll @joyweesemoll

Book: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Harper Perennial (Modern Classics)
Publication date: 2006 (Originally 1937)
Pages: 219

Source: Library

Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neal Hurston

Beautiful writing from the first page

Summary: A short classic novel, well ahead of its time, about love, adventure, and identity. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston flows with breathtaking moments from one stunningly-wrought setting to another following characters I won’t soon forget.

Thoughts: I was a little worried about Their Eyes Were Watching God for our diversity book club. We don’t often discuss novels. Would there be enough to say? More than enough. As it turned out, we drew one of our biggest crowds in a while and we kept talking until the library kicked us out so they could close for the evening.

Besides race, our default topic, we talked about women, history (and the need to find ways to approach history from something other than our 2014 selves — thanks, Tayé Foster Bradshaw for that insight), language and dialect, relationships, the adventure to find one’s self, and so much more.

We loved having each other as audience because it meant that we could read our favorite passages aloud. The poetic words of Their Eyes Were Watching God ache to be said and heard.

Appeal: For me, this felt like an essential American novel but it’s also a universal story. Very wide appeal.

Reviews: Their Eyes Were Watching God has been widely reviewed on book blogs. Here were a a couple that caught my attention:

Moira (Vulpes Libris) wrote about the language which was part of our discussion. We weren’t happy with the dialect in the last book we read, but liked it in this book. A big difference, for us, is that the prose between the dialog in Their Eyes Were Watching God is so lush and erudite — the dialect doesn’t come across as a judgment on the people speaking, but simply as a statement that this is the way folks talked.

Sandy (You’ve GOTTA Read This!) encountered this book as part of a Read the Book / See the Movie challenge — she loved the book, meh on the movie. So I won’t be in a rush to see the movie version. I enjoyed her review because she lives in Central Florida where many of the events in this book take place.

Have you read this book? What did you think?

Signature of Joy Weese Moll


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