The Stone Angel

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The Stone Angel
Written by: Margaret Laurence
Central Theme:
Synopsis: The story of Hagar Shipley, a 90-year-old woman struggling to come to grips with a life of intransigence and loss (Wikipedia)
First published: June 15, 1964
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The Stone Angel is a 1964 novel by Margaret Laurence. It was adapted into a film in 2007 by Kari Skogland.

It is told through the eyes of 90-year-old Hagar Currie Shipley, an elderly lady living with her grown son Marvin and daughter in law Doris in Vancouver in the 1960's. In the present, Hagar is overweight, slightly senile, and often falls, but still maintains her very stubborn personality which she has had all of her life. Faced with the threat of being moved to a nursing home, as Marvin himself is in his sixties and has difficulty caring for Hagar, Hagar reflects on her life growing up in Manawaka, a small prairie town in Manitoba. Hagar remembers her father's proud personality which she inherited, growing up as one of the more upper-class people in town, the deaths of her two brothers, her marrying Brampton Shipley (a crude widower her father considers beneath her) and her life with him. Hagar's story mirrors that of the Biblical Hagar, and her journey leads to an epiphany wherein Hagar realizes her flaws.

The title refers to a marble angel marking the grave of Hagar's mother, who died in childbirth.


Tropes used in The Stone Angel include: