So curious to hear what you all "see" on the cover of this novel.
Created: 02/02/12
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Join Date: 08/11/11
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I took the plant to be a symbol of Granada's growth as a person but also looked at the roots as how she became rooted to her history. The other interesting thing about the cover is that the girl is pictured between the plantation house and the slave cabins almost as the connection between the two.
Join Date: 12/22/11
Posts: 154
Yes, a very interesting cover.
I saw it as Granada being pensive as she connects the roots/healing/memory to the plantation house.
The green at the bottom representing the earth - which Polly told her you had to taste and listen to what they were saying.
The blue represents the sky and the universe which is the understanding of freedom as an enslaved person you can put your meaning to it, not what the master said.
Join Date: 05/16/11
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Join Date: 08/11/11
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Thanks for such great responses; I love what all of your eyes see - my vision has improved as well. I had
a thought, and half of it is not very pretty - as much as the tree is symbolic - growth, roots to your past - earth and new beginnings - the tree is the instrument of death - lynching- a bittersweet comparison and the ideas just came to me, so I am throwing it out there.
Join Date: 08/14/11
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Often a cover tells very little about the story within, not so here. Already mentioned are: healing plants, roots symbolizing life, earth sending healing herbs, between the fields & plantation house.. A sadness in the face as it looks towards the plantation, a place she never leaves. A night sky remembering all that have come before. The healing of Granada and how to heal others comes from the quiet mind.
Join Date: 12/04/11
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I was asked to offer my comments about the cover. The artist is African American and submitted almost "as is" after she read the book. I was stunned with the colors and the imagery. It was a visceral, not a rational, reaction, which is what the best art elicits. I too have studied it and tried to logically analyze it, but when you break it down piece by piece, you learn the whole is bigger than the sum of the parts. Nor is it stagnant. It's like a picture in motion. There is something spiritually moving to have the black girl's heroic profile, half on earth, half in the heaven, rooted yet reaching upward, incorporating Polly's teaching that all things contain perfection, it's just a matter of remembering.
Jon Odell
Join Date: 11/14/11
Posts: 56
It is interesting to read everyone's take on the cover art. Many different ideas- which is how it should be.
I think that is what real art does- it allows a personal connection and interpretation. Sometimes it's an emotional feeling, a memory that the art elicits, a yearning for a time or place, a heart's connection to a person.
This is a beautiful piece of art- to me, it related strength, growth and seeking. She was remembering all the seeds of learning that Polly had sowed.
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