The Bluest Eye

Hardcover, 164 pages

English language

Published Nov. 8, 1970 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

ISBN:
978-0-03-085074-5
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OCLC Number:
100866
Goodreads:
848431

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Each night Pecola prayed for blue eyes.

In her eleven years, no one had ever noticed Pecola. But with blue eyes, she thought, everything would be different. She would be so pretty that her parents would stop fighting. Her father would stop drinking. Her brother would stop running away. If only she could be beautiful. If only people would look at her.

When someone finally did, it was her father, drunk. He raped her. Soon she would bear his child...

6 editions

Staring Into Pecola’s Eyes: A Reflection on The Bluest Eye

Reading The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison was not just a literary experience—it was a reckoning. Told through fragmented perspectives, the novel follows Pecola Breedlove, a young Black girl in 1940s Ohio, who yearns for blue eyes, believing they will make her beautiful and loved. What unfolds is not simply her story, but an indictment of a society infected by racism, internalized self-hate, and generational trauma.

As I read, I didn’t feel like a distant observer. I felt complicit, uncomfortable, and ultimately heartbroken. Morrison’s language is both poetic and punishing. Her prose doesn’t ask for permission—it demands attention. I found myself stopping mid-paragraph, re-reading lines, feeling gutted by how brutal and beautiful they were.

What struck me most was how Morrison refuses to offer easy comfort. Pecola’s descent into madness isn’t romanticized. It’s raw. Her world doesn’t change. It breaks her. And yet, Morrison doesn’t write tragedy for …

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Subjects

  • African Americans -- Fiction
  • Girls -- Fiction
  • Ohio -- Fiction