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The Poisonwood Bible
by
Barbara Kingsolver
Announced June 23, 2000
Excerpt from Book One: Genesis
Leah Price
We came from Bethlehem, Georgia bearing Betty Crocker cake
mixes into the jungle. My sisters and I were all counting
on having one birthday apiece during our twelve-month mission.
"And heaven knows," our mother predicted, "they won't have Betty Crocker in the Congo."
"Where we are headed, there will be no buyers and sellers at
all," my father corrected. His tone implied that Mother failed
to grasp our mission, and that her concern with Betty Crocker
confederated her with the coin-jingling sinners who vexed
Jesus till he pitched a fit and threw them out of church.
"Where we are headed," he said, to make things perfectly
clear, "not so much as a Piggly Wiggly." Evidently Father saw
this as a point in the Congo's favor. I got the most spectacular
chills, just from trying to imagine.
She wouldn't go against him, of course. But once she understood
there was no turning back, our mother went to laying out in the
spare bedroom all the worldly things she thought we'd need in
the Congo just to scrape by. "The bare minimum, for my children," she'd declare under her breath, all the live-long day. In addition
to the cake mixes she piled up a dozen cans of Underwood deviled
ham; Rachel's ivory plastic hand mirror with powdered-wig ladies
on the back; a stainless steel thimble; a good pair of scissors;
a dozen Number 2 pencils; a world of Band-Aids, Anacin, Absorbine
Jr.; and a fever thermometer.
And now we are here, with all these colorful treasures safely
transported and stowed against necessity. Our stores are still
intact, save for the Anacin tablets taken by our mother and the
thimble lost down the latrine hole by Ruth May. But already our
supplies from home seem to represent a bygone world: they stand
out like bright party favors here in our Congolese house, set
against a backdrop of mostly all mud-colored things. When I
stare at them with the rainy season light in my eyes and Congo
grit in my teeth, I can hardly recollect the place where such
items were commonplace, merely a yellow pencil, merely a green
bottle of aspirin among so many other green bottles upon a high
shelf.
Mother tried to think of every contingency, including hunger
and illness. (And Father does, in general, approve of contingencies.
For it was God who gave man alone the capacity of foresight.) She
procured a good supply of antibiotic drugs from our Grand-Dad Dr.
Bud Wharton, who has senile dementia and loves to walk outdoors
naked but still can do two things perfectly: win at checkers and
write out prescriptions. We also brought over a cast-iron frying
pan, five packets of baker's yeast, pinking shears, the head of a
hatchet, a fold-up Army latrine spade, and all told a good deal
more. This was the full measure of civilization's evils we felt
obliged to carry with us.
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