By: Anonymous                                   The Color Purple, by Alice Walker, is a very intense book to read.   By intense, I                                 mean it is a book touching very difficult and hard aspects of life of a poor,                                 black oppressed woman in the early twentieth century. Walker does social                                 criticism in her novel, mostly criticizing the way black women were treated in                                 the early twentieth century. Walker uses the life experiences of Celie to                                 illustrate her social criticism. The Color Purple is not written in the style of                                 most novels. The author does not tell us everything about the characters, the                                 setting, and why the characters behave the way they do. The novel is written in                                 a series of letters, not dated. There are large gaps between some letters, but                                 this is not revealed by the author; we have to figure it out ourselves. The letters                                 are written in what Walker calls black folk language, which also reduces the                                 easiness of the reading. When the novel opens, Celie is a young black girl living                                 in Georgia in the early years of the twentieth century. She in an uneducated                                 girl, and writes her letters in common language. Celie is entering her                                 adolescence believing she was raped by her father and that he killed both of                                 their children. She writes to God, because she has no one else to write to. She                                 feels that what happened to her is so terrible that she can only talk about it to                                 someone sh...