Home > A Lesson before Dying Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > The Inaction of Grant Wiggins
A Lesson before Dying | The Inaction of Grant Wiggins
In this essay the author
examines how the inaction of Grant Wiggins, the
book’s narrator, might make readers uncomfortable.
Readers who do not want to take the time to learn from fiction, who want a novel to have a straightforward, simple message, might find Ernest J. Gaines’s A Lesson Before Dying a frustrating experience. This is definitely a moral book, with a distinct sense of right and wrong, but it is also too wise about the ways of the world to oversimplify the morals of its characters. For instance, if Jefferson were merely a witness to the liquor store shootings, then readers could easily agree that he is victimized by the legal system, but Gaines, rather than leaving him one hundred percent...
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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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- A Lesson before Dying: Essays and Criticism
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