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A Lesson before Dying | End as a Man
In the following review, Larson focuses on
Gaines’s treatment of human dignity and the
“morality of connectedness” in A Lesson Before
Dying.
The incident that propels the narrative of Ernest J. Gaines’s rich new novel is deceptively simple. Shortly after World War II, in a Cajun Louisiana town, a twenty-one-year-old black man who is barely literate finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, an innocent bystander during the robbery of a liquor store. The white store owner is killed, as are the two black men who attempt to rob the store; Jefferson—who is just standing there—panics. He grabs a bottle of liquor and starts drinking it. Then he looks at the phone, knowing he should call someone, but he’s never used...
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- A Lesson before Dying: Introduction
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- A Lesson before Dying: Ernest J. Gaines Biography
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- A Lesson before Dying: Historical Context
- A Lesson before Dying: Critical Overview
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