
Celie writes her letters in non-standard dialect, what Walker has called black folk language. Celie's letters are not written in standard English. We begin with Celie's letters and we encounter a language problem. There is yet another difficulty in reading this novel. We must rely on our own close reading and on the details that the women who write the letters - Celie and her sister Nettie - give us. Walker does not write as an all-knowing, omniscient narrator, filling in the gaps and giving us background. We gather this information from clues within the letters and by comparing letters. In addition, we soon realize that there are large gaps between letters, sometimes five years, but this information is not revealed by Walker herself. Thus, the time span of the novel is about forty years. Only after finishing the book do we realize that the letters begin in a time when people ride around in wagons, and when the letters end, people are driving cars. This novel consists of a series of letters, none of which are dated, and in order to have a time frame for the novel, we will have to read through it carefully, watching for clues about social attitudes, clothes, and other telling details. Walker does not tell us everything about the characters and the setting and why the characters behave as they do. The Color Purple is not an easy book to read because it is not written in the style of most novels.
