Trigger warnings follow the book review.
How should we categorize Beloved? Its opening pages designate it as a paranormal novel. Sethe, a woman who escaped enslavement on the terrifying Sweet Home plantation, lives with her teenage daughter, Denver, in their Cincinnati house. However, their home also hosts a vengeful presence: the ghost of Sethe’s infant daughter. Like a magician flourishing her best tricks, the spirit draws from the classics of ghostly activity. Mirrors shatter. Handprints appear in cakes. And, in the baby’s strongest expression of rage, the house shakes. But early on, Paul D–a man who was enslaved alongside Sethe and with whom she develops a complicated romance–arrives and seemingly banishes the ghost. Mere chapters later, Beloved again veers into the paranormal, but with a flesh-and-blood twist. A woman appears at Sethe’s house, whose name–Beloved–mirrors the epitaph on Sethe’s daughter’s tombstone, and who is chillingly adept at bonding with Denver, chasing Paul D away, emotionally manipulating Sethe, and overindulging her sense of abandonment and anger… Continue reading “Toni Morrison, Beloved (1987)”