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Invisible Man - Community Reviews back

by Ralph Ellison
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Fangirl Moments and My Two Cents
Fangirl Moments and My Two Cents rated it 3 years ago
Told from a black man's POV. He starts young at a school in the south and ends in a city in the north. It's not a feel good tale, but it is interesting. It's tragic how some things don't seem like they have gotten any better since this was written.
Reading For The Heck Of It
Reading For The Heck Of It rated it 6 years ago
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is another title from the list of 100 books compiled for the Great American Read. (Have you voted today?) I feel somewhat chagrined that I had never heard of this classic until I checked out this list. The reader follows a nameless narrator who tells the story of his d...
The better to see you, my dear
The better to see you, my dear rated it 6 years ago
On various fronts. The overarching subject, the sense of hopelessness, helplessness and despair, the long-winded, meandering way the story is told (which is on par with the idea that it is a stream-of-conscience recount), and the purpose way in which this guy's obliviousness is made plain (and cring...
Sheila's Reads
Sheila's Reads rated it 8 years ago
Beautiful prose. I loved the lyricism of his words. His writing flows. This book is a timely today as when it was written and during the time it is set. Unfortunately not much has changed in the U.S. regarding how people are seen or not seen and used. Everyone needs to read this.
Bloodorange
Bloodorange rated it 9 years ago
1. I had 39 status updates from this one, most of them quotations. This book is highly quotable. I'm not even sure Invisible Man is a 'good' - i.e. traditional - novel (I will consider this in a moment), but the quotability of this! Now I know men are different and that all life is divided and that ...
Abandoned by Booklikes
Abandoned by Booklikes rated it 9 years ago
This story unfolds as an unnamed narrator begins to describe how he became an invisible man. We follow the 'invisible man' through the 1920s right up to the 1950s. Ralph Ellison wrote this book in response to the black existentialism that was going on through the black community in the 1950s. I woul...
manugw
manugw rated it 10 years ago
This is a quirky book. The man is an African American speaking in first person from beginning to end, Throughhout the narrative he tells part of his life story and surrounding events from a sociological standpoint, that is what is being an African American and how this relates to every event of your...
spoko
spoko rated it 11 years ago
I was quite uncomfortable with a significant part of this book. I recognize that for a lot of people—authors and readers alike—discomfort is an end in itself. For me it's not. I don't need to be overtly challenged in that way to find a book meaningful. That said, I recognize that discomfort has its ...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it 11 years ago
Invisible Man was on a list of "100 Significant Books" I was working through, and is considered one of the great novels of the 20th Century, not just one of the great American or African-African works. I've heard Ellison described as the "Black Joyce" which is rather unfair to Ellison--both because ...
Kris' Books.
Kris' Books. rated it 12 years ago
This, in my opinion, is a gem of a book. It really made me think about what it means to be a 'person', of any race, who aims to make something out of his life and stand for his own cause despite the hardships which may come his way. The book encompasses the differences between being socially accepta...
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