Summary of this Book... | ||
The novel, Conception, is ruthlessly original in the way it handles the subject of teenage pregnancy. Although the plot basically concentrates on the story of young African-American girl deceived by her circumstances and her next-door neighbor's husband, it also gives voice to the unborn spirit of the child she is carrying. Fifteen year-old Shivana Montgomery tries to find some answer to her loneliness in the arms of a man, Leroy, who is the husband of the woman next door she baby sits for. Leroy is a selfish drug-dealer who has no respect for other people. After several months of unsatisfactory sex with Leroy, Shivana becomes pregnant. Shivana's unborn child's spirit tells about its other experiences and attempts to be born; thus, in doing so, the author, through the spirit's voice, entertains and informs the reader with stories within the main story. In all its conceptions by the slave girl Yoshi, Darlene, and Tawana, the spirit of the baby complains of the rejection of its right to be born; therefore, it wants Shivana to love and accept it. Shivana, on the other hand, wants to get rid of her baby, but does not have the money for aborting it. Shivana's home life with her single mother is a disaster. Her aunt Jewel tries to help her, although she is involved with her boyfriend and with making a better life for herself. An upstairs neighbor, Rasul, takes interest in Shivana and tries to convince her to keep the baby. Rasul, too, is a lonely black boy, who is taken care of by his uncle's family. Rasul is studying to finish high school and go to college. Just when Shivana finds the money necessary to get rid of her problem, the baby's spirit wins, and Shivana goes to a home for unwed mothers. Whatever the ending of the novel may suggest, Shivana's story and the stories embedded in it are brilliantly told, and the baby spirit's voice is poignant and heartrending. | ||
This type of Book is good for... | ||
making people think and emphatize with the hardships of teenagers who live not-too-great lives under cruel conditions. | ||
I especially liked... | ||
the voice of the unborn spirit of the child and the fact that the main character, a young girl, began to learn to respect herself while trying to survive in a cruel world. | ||
I didn't like... | ||
the ending, because it felt to me as if the writer suddenly got bored with the story she was telling and wanted a quick ending. So she came up with a blow by the hand of fate ending instead of making the story end with the evolution of the main characters or the plot; however, her goal might have been to leave the reader in a shock, because the ending was so unexpected and abrupt. | ||
This Book made me feel... | ||
sorry for Shivana. | ||
The author of this Book... | ||
Kalisha Buckhanon, was born in 1977. She has been writing since the age of six. She graduated magna cum laude from and was elected into Phi Beta Kappa at the University of Chicago. She also completed her Master's Degree in English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago. Her first novel Upstate won the Alex Award and the Audie Award, among other acclaim and nominations. Her articles, stories, and essays have appeared in many literary publications. | ||
I recommend this Book because... | ||
This novel is important in the sense that it seems to be a debate on what life truly is. Then, it also serves as an observation of the treacherous life in the ghetto and what African-American women still endure in our day. | ||
Further Comments... | ||
Regardless of the fact that I was not too crazy of the ending, this book is proof to the idea that fiction is more precise with the truth than truth itself. | ||
Interested in buying this? Support Writing.Com by making your purchase of Conception from Amazon.Com!
Created Jun 18, 2008 at 10:34pm •
Submit your own review...
|