Review | Thursday 30 October 2008
A Mercy: Toni Morrison
A Mercy is Nobel laureate Toni Morrison’s ninth novel and the first since her Pulitzer Prize winning Beloved to depict American slavery. Don’t be fooled by the size – this slim, powerful novel will leave you reeling. A Mercy transports you into the pristine wilderness of the Americas in the 1680s, when slavery was in its infancy and the country pockmarked by struggling communities harbouring cruel religious beliefs and brutal intolerance. Race hatred has not yet taken hold, but the seeds have been sown.
Morrison vividly realises this age through the voice of a compassionate white farmer, a young black girl who he accepts as part payment for a bad debt, a misfit orphan, a Native American woman and a devastated mother forced to give up her child in order to save her. Unlike Beloved, this novel is not about race but instead explores an emerging culture of servitude, oppression, power and ownership; themes that resonate well into our own twenty-first century. If you have not yet read Toni Morrison, I urge you to read this exceptional novel – and then continue on with her masterpiece Beloved.