Blog Layout

Truth in Timbre: On Reading Toni Morrison- Kerry Clare

Author name


It’s only been in the last few years that I’ve started to read the novels of Toni Morrison—

Beloved, Sula, Jazz , and just recently her debut The Bluest Eye —and for me, this has been a process of becoming, of watching the possibilities of literature unfolding. Mesmerizing, and also disorientating. I’ve found understanding these novels to be difficult. The kinds of places where the bottom land is high up on the hill. Where the unsaid is articulated, where the wicked are permitted sympathy and understanding. Whose love is a kind of gutting desperation, an urge toward destruction. Stories that are strange, true, and irreducible.

“I chose a unique situation, not a representative one,” Morrison explains in the Foreword to The Bluest Eye. And yet that novel’s unique situation, the particular wounding and destruction of Pecola Breedlove, is shown not to be singular at all, but connected to race, to class, to gender, to geography. To everything. Omnipresent and haunting.

“There is really nothing more to say—except why. But since why is difficult to handle, one must take refuge in how.”

For me, this has been a process of becoming, of watching the possibilities of literature unfolding.

Kerry Clare

In The Bluest Eye , as in all her novels that I’ve read so far, Morrison’s narrative stretches back across years and the expanse of a country to answer that question of how, never straightforward, never linear, because to be direct is too simple. A straight line can be negated, traced back upon itself, but the winding tendrils of Pecola’s story are impossible to resist becoming tangled in. Or you might try to resist, but they’ll only hold you tighter.

And I marvel at how a novel about such abject suffering, a novel I find absolutely difficult, can still flow like running water. Sparkle, even. How can The Bluest Eye be such a pleasure to read? The pitch-perfect dialogue, the most compelling description of the viscousness of vomit: “How, I wonder, can it be so neat and nasty at the same time?” How does a writer do a thing like that? Capturing “the dreadful funkiness of passion, the funkiness of nature, the funkiness of the wide range of human emotions”?

As a beginning reader of Toni Morrison, and as a reader who is white, I relate to the perspective of Claudia in The Bluest Eye , listening with her sister to the conversation of the grown-ups around them: “We do not, cannot, know the meanings of all their words… So we watch their faces, their hands, their feet, and listen for truth in timbre.”

Check out Kerry Clare’s latest novel Waiting For a Star To Fall

Book cover for Kerry Clare's novel Waiting for a Star to Fall

Portrait of Kerry Clare

KERRY CLARE’S first novel,  Mitzi Bytes , was called “entertaining, engaging and timely” by the  Toronto Star , who also noted that it “heralds the arrival of a fantastic, fun new novelist on the Canadian scene.”

She is editor of  The M Word: Conversations About Motherhood , a National Magazine Award-nominated essayist, and editor of Canadian books website  49thShelf.com. She writes about books and reading at her popular blog,  Pickle Me This  and lives in Toronto with her family.

To learn more about Toni Morrison and her legacy get your tickets for Beloved: A Celebration of Toni Morrison and Black Women Writers with Donna Bailey Nurse

By laterskatersgang October 10, 2023
In the spring of 2022, Canadian Stage and Luminato invited Cultural Pluralism in the Arts Movement Ontario (CPAMO) to gather information related to production processes and practices for onboarding artists, artistic directors and those who support artists. Luminato and Canadian Stage invited CPAMO to conduct research, focus groups, interviews and document review on an international […]
By laterskatersgang June 6, 2023
Start your summer with a bang: Luminato Festival Toronto begins June 7! Experience Luminato Festival Toronto June 7 – 18 with art and culture across the city. This year, we explore ideas centered around the importance of home. Through heartfelt cultural stories in the form of street art, opera, theatre, visual art, and music, we […]
A gift box with a blue bow is surrounded by a variety of items.
By laterskatersgang December 1, 2022
The holiday season is upon us and we’re gearing up for all the gift giving and shopping that will ensue in the following weeks. Are you dreading the massive lines and crowds in malls and shopping centers? So are we, that’s why we curated a unique list of gift items for any and every arts […]
The word start is written in green and yellow on a blue background.
By laterskatersgang November 22, 2022
Today we’re thrilled to share our first installment of the 2023 festival program featuring exceptional productions coming to the stage from June 7th to June 18th, 2023. With two world premieres, a new vision for a seldom seen opera, a rare revival of a seminal dance work and a hit from the touring circuit, June’s […]
By laterskatersgang October 19, 2022
Cover photo of Naomi Campbell, Artistic Director (left) and Celia Smith, CEO (right) by Cassandra Popescu. Naomi Campbell has decided that Luminato’s 2023 festival will be her final festival as our Artistic Director. For over a decade, Naomi Campbell has been part of Luminato and this June will mark her fifth year as the Artistic […]
A crowd of people are watching a display of confetti in the sky.
By laterskatersgang October 14, 2022
What if great art could come to life, defy gravity, and fly through the sky? That’s exactly what Katharine Harvey is bringing to Toronto’s skyline in Turning in the Light, an artwork that will be presented at Light Up Downsview: A Drone Performance by Katharine Harvey on November 12, 2022.  Katharine Harvey is a contemporary Canadian […]
A man playing a piano in front of a large screen
By laterskatersgang September 28, 2022
Banner image of Jeremy Dutcher performing in Biziindan! Luminato 2019 by Jeremy Mimnagh. Supported by Slaight Music. Thank you to our long-term supporter, Gary Slaight and the Slaight Family Foundation, for your $15M transformational gift to support theatres and artists recovering from pandemic closures. We’re honoured to be in the company of incredible Canadian theatre […]
A woman with curly hair is smiling in a black and white photo.
By laterskatersgang June 13, 2022
“The function, the very serious function of racism is distraction. It keeps you from doing your work. It keeps you explaining, over and over again, your reason for being. Somebody says you have no language and you spend twenty years proving that you do. Somebody says your head isn’t shaped properly so you have scientists […]
The luminato festival is taking place in toronto from june 9 to 19.
By laterskatersgang June 8, 2022
Long days. Warm nights. It’s summer in Toronto and Luminato 2022 is here! We could not be more excited to reignite the city with 11 days of music, dance, theatre, art, literature, and much more. There is so much to see and do across the city region. Here is your guide to your best Luminato experience. Kick […]
A black and white photo of a woman smiling with her hand on her chin.
By laterskatersgang June 6, 2022
There was this one summer, I must have been about 12, when I discovered the writing of both Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou. Maya’s writing was open, honest, embracing. Toni’s, equally important, equally honest, was somehow more obscure. Maya’s truths were clearly presented, served like confidences between firm friends. Toni’s left me peeling back the […]
More Posts
Share by: