The Bean Trees
What is the irony in the following: when Taylor looks for a place to live, she looks at "Harmonious Space" where the ad says you must "be open to new ideas"
the bean trees
the bean trees
The centerpiece of Chapter Five is Taylor's visit to the odd commune, proves a savvy parody of New Age' principles, particularly when filtered through the view of the practical, down-to-earth narrator. The members of the commune are sharply rendered types, claiming to adhere to an unconventional lifestyle and to be "open to new ideas" but instead proving themselves to be rigid, dogmatic and humorless. Kingsolver does not spare any satiric details, from the pretentious names (Fei and La-Isha) to the politically correct dogma that gender is not an issue (when the question about Turtle's gender was asked innocently) to the adherence to strict yet unproven diet principles. Kingsolver portrays these characters essentially as hypocrites and frauds, and justly uses them as comic material to help Lou Ann and Taylor bond.
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