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Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Demon Copperhead

A Novel

by Barbara Kingsolver
  • BookBrowse Review:
  • Critics' Consensus (7):
  • Readers' Rating (18):
  • First Published:
  • Oct 18, 2022, 560 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Aug 2024, 560 pages
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About This Book

Reviews

Page 3 of 3
There are currently 18 reader reviews for Demon Copperhead
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Liz

Am I the only reader in the world who hated this book?
Feeling a bit crazy as an avid reader of quality books, children’s YA books, history, science, novels—- I love good lit, for all ages. Writing that makes your spirit soar, heart break, your mind blown, magic happen, forgiveness melt you, indignation rise, horror and man’s inhumanity to man result in making me a more compassionate person and hope take flight out of darkness.

This book was taking advantage of a horrible injustice by using a flat, one voice of a child with adult perspective that didn’t work. Taking advantage of a Dickens classic to give it heft that it simply didn’t carry.

Crazy-making trying to find one review that remotely even, didn’t give it 5 stars.
All the light we cannot see, The Nickel Boys (Pulitzer Prize Winners) are just two in which the prose is breathtaking.
Good books have stories that may be heartbreaking, with multi-voices making a rich, multi-textured tapestry that enriches the reader.

What in the world am I missing about this flat single-voiced teenaged-wet-dream (tossed in to titillate?) with the manipulated takeoff of the vicious oxycodone epidemic ?

I simply don’t get the adoration of this book. But realize I’m alone!
Anne

Disgusted
I want Marne, Molly and Liz to know that they are definitely not alone. I second everything that they have written above. I just read Demon Copperhead as part of a book club read. Everyone else in the group loved it, while I not only didn't want to finish it, I wanted to get it out of my house. I've read many books that tell the stories of people that have experienced extreme trauma and difficult lives - holocaust experiences, experiences of war times and dislocation, oppression, slavery, extreme racism, poverty and gender injustice, caste systems, etc. I do value being aware of, witnessing and sharing people's experiences of hardship. But from the beginning, this narration, and this narrator, felt false. The narrator's voice is certainly not that of a 10 year old boy - it is more like a 30 year old sex- and excrement- addicted child pornographer. The rest of the characters seemed paper thin, one dimensional stereotypes. I grew up in a poor working class family with troubled, traumatized parents myself - but that's never the whole story or the only story. I am sensitive to any group of poor people being portrayed in such a one sided, completely negative way. I felt that Kingsolver was out to maximize horror, and purposely excluded the many deep threads of nourishment and support that the Appalachian people ( and other poor people) have - like their love of their land, their mountains, their unique culture and faith, their community of people, their food, their art forms. Also, the book seemed to be a plea for help - implying that the people of the Appalachian region have been completely abandoned and forgotten. This idea that no one cares, is belied by the huge attention, caring and tens of billions of dollars that have been invested throughout Appalachia over the last 50 years; targeted to effect significant improvement in healthcare, social services, educational attainment, housing, employment, water quality, transportation and communication infrastructure, etc. Is the author trying to give the impression this has all been for naught? I'm glad for anyone who feels seen and acknowledged through the telling of this story. Possibly that's the audience that the author wanted to reach out to - and that is valuable. But for me, it seemed to be going to false extremes in an attempt to argue me out of beliefs and prejudices that I never held to begin with.
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