Author Highlight: Toni Morrison


Posted on Feb 17, 2021

Author Toni Morrison is not just a multi-awarded novelist but also an accomplished professor, influential artist, and cultural icon.


Toni Morrison

Born Chloe Anthony Wofford, Morrison exhibited interest in literature early in life. She grew up in a working-class family of six in Ohio and wasn’t aware of racial divisions until she was a teenager. In 1949, she graduated from high school with honors and entered Howard University to study literature after. She pursued a master’s degree at Cornell, focusing on the works of Virginia Woolf and William Faulkner. Afterward, she moved to Texas to teach at Texas Southern University.


In 1958, Morrison got married after returning to Ohio. She gave birth to her first son in 1961 and joined a writers’ group at Howard University soon after. There she began working on her first novel, which started out as a short story. In 1964, she gave birth to her second son. She then moved to New York with the two of them to work as an editor, while her husband returned to Jamaica. She later started working as an editor at Random House.


Morrison’s books have always championed the experiences of Black Americans, and this is evident in her first novel, The Bluest Eye (1970). The book is about an adolescent girl who obsesses over white beauty standards and longs to have blue eyes. Her second novel, Sula, discusses similar issues of conformity. Song of Solomon, which is Morrison’s third novel, gave her a national platform. Unlike her previous novels, Song of Solomon has a male protagonist in search of his identity. Her fourth novel, Tar Baby, is set in the Caribbean and has conflicts of race, class, and sex.


Beloved, undoubtedly Morrison’s most popular work, was published in 1987. The novel was based on the true-to-life story of Margaret Garner, a former slave who had to kill her own daughter to spare her from slavery. In Beloved, the child returns as a ghost who haunts her mother’s home. The book won multiple awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988. In 1998, Beloved was adapted into a film starring Oprah Winfrey, Thandie Newton, and Danny Glover. Nearly a decade later, she wrote the libretto for an opera about the same story that inspired her to write Beloved, Margaret Garner.


Morrison returned to academia in 1989 and became a professor at Princeton Literature and at the same time wrote even more books. While in Princeton, she established the Princeton Atelier, a program to help writers and performers create original works. In 1993, she became the first African American woman to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. She published her next book, Jazz, in 1994 and Paradise in 1998.


Aside from novels, Morrison also wrote some children’s books. She started with The Big Box in 1999, The Book of Mean People in 2002, The Ant or the Grasshopper in 2003, and Little Cloud and Lady Wind in 2010. She also wrote a play called Dreaming Emmett as well as the lyrics to two songs: “Four Songs” with Andre Previn and “Sweet Talk” with Richard Danielpour.


Outside of fiction, Morrison published a nonfiction in 2008 called What Moves the Margin and served as an editor for a collection of essays on censorship called Burn This Book.


Even late in her life, Morrison was a prolific writer. She published Home in 2012, a novel set after the Korean War, and worked on the production Desdemona, inspired by Shakespeare’s Othello. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama that same year. In 2015, she published the novella God Help the Child.


In 2019, Morrison passed away in New York. By then, she had already made a name for herself in American literature, ensuring that she will be remembered for the years to come.



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