"The Color Purple"

"The Color Purple" was about a fourteen year old girl Celie. It was about her life. Her mother died when she was fourteen years old. She lived with her daddy and her sister Nettie. They were African Americans. Celie's dad didn't care about her at all, that's why she always got beat up by her dad. Nettie was a beautiful girl. A man she met in Church wanted to marry her in order to watch his kids. The man was named Albert, and Nettie's dad gave him Celie instead of Nettie. His dad always insulted Celie, and he gave away her two children. After they married Celie didn't live in a happy family. Instead, she still got beat up by Albert and his children. Albert didn't like her because he loved someone else named Shug. When the first time Celie saw her picture, she started to like her or even lobed her. They finally net and they fall in love with each other. Shug brought her to the North where she lived. She sang and Celie stayed at home to make pants. She taught Celie how to love, how to speak for herself. Celie knew that her dad was her stepdaddy, not her real father. Her father died and her other was crazy. She got all this information from her sister Nettie's letters. Nettie ran away from home a long time ago and she net Celie's two children and became a missionary. She went our and saw the world. She went to England and she knew how different it was between them and the white people. Celie's stepdaddy died, and Celie went back home to inherit all the properties that her dad and mom left her. At the same time Shug left her for a nineteen years old boy She was so sad. She cleaned up the house and waited for Nettie to come back. Finally, Nettie and Samuel who raised Celie's kids married, and they came back home to see Celie. Shug came back to Celie, too. At the end, they were finally together and they had each other. They were happy. This story is not just wrote about Celie, it also told us about the background at that time. It told us what it was like back then between black people and white people.