In ten pages the life and literature of Alice Walker are considered in this comparative analysis of The Way Forward is with a Broken Heart and The Color Purple. Six sources are cited in the bibliography.
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and openly of the situations which face blacks and, more specifically, women. Her writing isnt merely anecdotal and you wont
find blacks in supporting roles as maids or chauffers. Instead, what you will find in an Alice Walker novel are black men and women with "real" personalities and complex
lives. Characters who face issues which create huge struggles in their lives as well as the simplicity of their relationships and connections.
Furthermore, Alice Walker is very adept at immersing herself in her writings, and her work takes on an extraordinary autobiographical aire, although her characters are largely
fictional. The fact that Walker draws so extensively from her own life, relationships and experiences is important in terms of the work itself. It definitely provides a strong
voice in the characters Walker develops. In order to fully understand the writings of Alice Walker, it is important to understand Alice Walker the woman. This author
has a long and complex history, as do many of her characters. Her entire life experience can be found in bits and pieces throughout her lifes work and perhaps
that is a large part of the appeal of Alice Walker the writer. Biography of Alice Walker "Alice Malsenior Walker
was born on February 9, 1944 in Eatonton, Georgia, the eighth and youngest child of Minnie Tallulah Grant Walker and Willie Lee Walker" (Alice Walker Biography). Walker came
from a happy home, despite the fact that her parents were poor sharecroppers (Alice Walker Biography). Walkers mother was of Cherokee Indian heritage while her fathers great-great-great grandmother was