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God Don't Like Ugly (2006)

God Don't Like Ugly (2006)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
4.26 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0758220324 (ISBN13: 9780758220325)
Language
English
Publisher
kensington

About book God Don't Like Ugly (2006)

I was angry throughout the book. Not for what happened to the main character (even though it was a horrible experience) but actually mad at the character. I was mad at Annette because she never spoke out about what happened to her, only to Rhonda. She began to stand up for herself against Mr Boatwright but not enough for her to be more active in trying to stop what was happening. Ina way it was like she liked it and she began to like Mr. Boatwright. They were like companions. When it was to the point that she ended up in the hospital was mu final draw and i almost put the book back on the shelf. I no longer felt sorry for her. The Protagonist was her on Antagonist and it was no longer support form me for the abused “under dog”. I had the strongest feeling of "I'm tired of hearing about it if you’re not going to do anything about it." That may have come across mean but i would believe sometimes there is a breaking point. Killing an unborn child, almost killing yourself, having your own mother believe you were promiscuous, and the man that raped you agree that you are promiscuous and yet she stills says nothing was the breaking point for me. Rhonda was a bad ass but a little crazy. The conclusion was wrapped up too fast almost rushed in a sense that it seemed to fit into one chapter of a few pages.I wasn't as satisfied with this book as i had hoped. However I will read "God Still Don't Like Ugly" and the 3rd installment, "God Aint Blind" to see what happens to Rhoda and Annette’s friendship.

Annette Goode, born in the racist South of the 1950s, is the heroine of Monroe's strong second novel (after The Upper Room), a coming-of-age journey depicted with wit, poignancy and bite. Up until 1963, when 13-year-old, overweight Annette Goode meets beautiful Rhoda Nelson, only daughter of the Richland, Ohio, town undertaker, Annette's life has been a nightmare. After Annette's father left her mother (Muh'Dear) for a white woman, Muh'Dear has scraped by as a domestic, stealing leftover food from her employers' kitchens; Annette overeats to compensate for her father's abandonment. Annette is only seven when she asks their boarder, Mr. Boatwright, to be her daddy. Soon after, he begins raping her. Annette, who considers herself fat and ugly, endures silently, thinking no one will believe her. She suffers the attacks for years until Rhoda befriends her and decides the man must be stopped. Monroe's characters are well drawn, full-bodied and not all bad. Monroe paints sympathetic portraits of Judge Lawson, the honorable white man Muh'Dear works for; Mr. Nelson, the undertaker; Scary Mary, who runs a brothel but has a good heart; and Pee Wee, Annette's young gay friend. However, it is the convincingly depicted friendship between Annette and Rhoda that drives the narrative and gives Annette the courage to end her abuse. In using a young girl's innocent voice to narrate, Monroe recounts a tale of extreme hardship with a hopeful, uplifting tone.

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Alright so after hearing about this book from others and seeing it all over the train in the hands of young women who really looked enthralled (I find out the best books just by looking at what others read) I decided I had to read this book and well it only took three days but I didnt really enjoy it. I dont know if it was the subject matter (sexual abuse, racism, friendships, low self esteem and murder/revenge) or the fact that I just didnt like any of the characters--I stopped feeling sorry for Annette after the first abuse and that she continued for seven more years was too much, I thought Rhoda would be interesting but she was cliched and boring after all and even Scary Mary who was named with such promise like she would be interesting was not even worth mentioning. At the end of the book there is refererence to a sequel to possibly flesh out more of the characters and continue their lives but am I really interested? Okay so there were loose ends and I have the second book so I will read it but cant recommend it..too simplisitic, depressing and all around flat. Easy reading but nothing to suck you in..
—Monique

"God Don't Like Ugly" by Mary Monroe was one of the best books I've ever read. I like how the author almost gives the reader what they want. I know when I was reading it I stayed interested. Annette is the main characters name, she gets molested by brother boatright for years-someone who everyone , including her family trusted. This is the beggining to all her problems. Annette couldn't stand him, and confided to her new friend named Rhoda. Rhoda was the complete antithesis of Anette. Annette was poor, not very attractive, or smart. After it seemed like nothing could get worse with brother boatright Annettes mother marries him. Rhoda finds out about the molestation and kills brother Boatright and before it happened she let Annette know. Annette deeply regretted it and for a short time stopped speaking to Rhoda. Before you know it a little girl in the town is missing and then killed. Annette expected that Rhoda killed the little girl too. Which she did. I find this unbelieveale and very interesting, especially because in the beginning of the story she is seen as almost perfect. I would reccomened the book to anyone, to all. I beieve that maybe this book is underated.
—Raquel King

At the beginning this book was a real page-turner. Plus, the language is fairly easy and the chapters short. The story got interesting really fast and for some time I didn't want to put the book down.However, the book later had some lengths - certain periods of time were just stretched out too much and it was not as interesting anymore. The end provided closure and rounded off the book well. Interesting story, but it could have been about 80 pages shorter and would've still been nice.I would recommend this book to young adults as it's a beautiful coming of age novel that deals with intense topics like sexual abuse, racism, feeling left out (the main character is black and overweight) and friendship. It would be most interesting to young girls obviously and it's definitely easy enough to be read by Oberstufe ESL (my best guess would be 6. - 8. Klasse) Definitely something to have in your classroom library.
—Michaela

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