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The Poisonwood Bible Character Analysis

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Throughout the novel The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver Leah Price, a key character and narrative voice, evolved and progressed through her tone, which changed from optimistic to sadness to anger, and also through her diction, which shifted from using admirable things to describe her father to using words of hatred and resentment towards him, and lastly through her point of view on religion, which changed from being a faithful Christian to truly questioning her belief in God. Leah Price grows all through the novel and the readers get to witness her transformation from a child at fourteen to an adult woman. She changes her country, then her religion, and then her respect and admiration for her father. Leah lost everything all the while gaining …show more content…
And while she was optimistic, loving and admiring of her father, and a faithful Christian, all of that changed as she grew into a woman in The Congo. As she faced many things like the hardships of her family getting sick and dying, love, creating a family of her own, and being a minority, she became pessimistic about the world and what it offered. Leah developed a hatred and resentment towards her father because he allowed her to believe that the world was a just place when in fact it is the opposite. She felt like a fool for believing it and she felt like a fool for having such great faith in her religious beliefs. As a child she followed God’s words but as she grew older she realized all he did was disappoint her and if he is as great a man as believed, then maybe he is not real. Her progression throughout the novel was depressing and disheartening to the reader but she learned many valuable lessons, the biggest being that the world is a cruel and unfair place. The evolution of such a significant character and narrator of the novel was truly impactful and proved to be an enormous

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