
Namwali Serpell celebrates literary genius in 'On Morrison'
Clip: 2/17/2026 | 7m 44sVideo has Closed Captions
Namwali Serpell celebrates Toni Morrison's literary genius in 'On Morrison'
In her new book, award-winning novelist Namwali Serpell takes on Toni Morrison, one of the towering figures in American literature. Serpell guides readers through Morrison’s extraordinary body of work, offering close readings that illuminate the depth of Morrison’s imagination, innovation and craft. Geoff Bennett sat down with Serpell to discuss "On Morrison."
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Major corporate funding for the PBS News Hour is provided by BDO, BNSF, Consumer Cellular, American Cruise Lines, and Raymond James. Funding for the PBS NewsHour Weekend is provided by...

Namwali Serpell celebrates literary genius in 'On Morrison'
Clip: 2/17/2026 | 7m 44sVideo has Closed Captions
In her new book, award-winning novelist Namwali Serpell takes on Toni Morrison, one of the towering figures in American literature. Serpell guides readers through Morrison’s extraordinary body of work, offering close readings that illuminate the depth of Morrison’s imagination, innovation and craft. Geoff Bennett sat down with Serpell to discuss "On Morrison."
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipGEOFF BENNETT: In her new book,# award-winning novelist Namwali## Serpell takes on one of the towering figures# in American literature, Toni Morrison.
Serpell guides readers through# Morrison's extraordinary body of work,## from her celebrated novels, to# her criticism, poetry and plays,## offering close readings that illuminate# the depth of Morrison's imagination,## innovation and craft.
And it asks what it means# to read Morrison with fresh eyes in our time.
I recently spoke with Namwali# Serpell about her book "On Morrison."
Namwali Serpell, thank you for being here.
NAMWALI SERPELL, Author, "On Morrison":# Thank you so much for having me.
GEOFF BENNETT: In this book, you focus# on the entirety of Toni Morrison's w.. the 11 novels, the play, beyond.
And early in the book, you write: "I# never met Morrison.
I never tried to## either.
I have loved knowing her through# reading her over the decades of my life."
Why was it important to establish that distance# at the beginning to make clear that the work,## not the woman, was the primary focus?
NAMWALI SERPELL: Thank you# so much for that question.
Morrison herself had a version to what she# called biographical writing.
She thought## that human beings had a kind of copyright on# their selves.
And so she said, for her, writing## was very much about invention, imagining someone# from the curl to the full human being, she said.
She often advised her creative writing# students, I don't want to hear about your## little selves.
Don't write about yourself.# I want you to write about other people.
And when she contracted to write a memoir,# she ended up canceling that project,## because she said, my life's not that interesting.
So I sort of feel like I have the privilege# of getting to know Morrison through her work,## in a way, because she gives us that# permission.
Reading and writing were## also so foundational to what she believed and# to how she herself related to other people.## She said, writing for me is a# slow and advanced form of reading.
And so, in that sense, I felt that kind of# literary relationship was something that I really## wanted to unfold in my analysis of her work.# Rather than thinking about her as this kind of## monument to Black excellence, I wanted to# really dig in and play with her language.
GEOFF BENNETT: And her work is so often# understood to be and described as difficult,## sometimes as a criticism, sometimes as a warning.
And in the book, you argue that# the difficulty isn't a flaw;## it's really a demand placed on the# reader.
Tell me more about that.
NAMWALI SERPELL: Morrison was very good# at articulating why she did the things## that she did in terms of her choices, her# formal choices, the choices of design.
And she spoke about, for example, having gaps# and spaces in the work so that the reader has## to step in to piece things together.
And,# for her, this was part of an ethos that## had to do with egalitarianism, treating the# reading experience, the writing experience,## the whole literary experience as a kind of# communal, mutually enforcing engagement.
You have to actually work to make the work come to# life with her.
And I think, for her, that was very## important, very much a part of a Black aesthetic.# When you're in a jazz show, the hoots and hollers## and the calls and the clapping is as much part# of the performance as the playing of the music.
GEOFF BENNETT: A question just occurred# to me.
How can a writer like Toni Morrison## be fully institutionalized, in the# sense that she is taught everywhere,## and yet fundamentally misunderstood# and not read on her own terms?
NAMWALI SERPELL: This is a# really, really key question.
And it's a paradox that her very good friend# Fran Lebowitz articulated when Morrison passed## away.
She said Morrison's writing was# underappreciated, curiously enough,## perhaps because people always looked at it# through the prism of her being Black and her## being a woman.
There's a way in which her stature,# her success came to overshadow the work itself.
There's a kind of presumption# that Morrison's work is brilliant,## it's beautiful, but people don't# actually need to read it.
And,## in this way, there's been a lack of attention# to how experimental her writing was and how## innovative her writing was, how much# she broke the form of the novel open.
I also think, for a long time, there were# not readers able to bridge, as she did,## her understanding of the novel with her# understanding of Black cultural forms,## things like signifying, things# like shade, things like jazz.
And it's by having this kind of balance of the# two forms of knowledge, as a professor myself,## as a Black woman, as a writer, that# I feel like I wanted to contribute to## the conversation about Morrison's work,# focusing on her mastery of Black form.
GEOFF BENNETT: It's interesting.
I hear you# say that the paradox of Toni Morrison was that,## the more she was celebrated, the# less rigorously she was read.
NAMWALI SERPELL: She was read, yes.
GEOFF BENNETT: And in this moment# that prizes clarity and .. and instant comprehension, what added# value does Toni Morrison's work yield?
NAMWALI SERPELL: I think Morrison wanted to go# back to what she described as village literature,## which is a notion that literature is# a social form, it's a community form,## and therefore it can't just tell you,# the individual reader, what to do.
It has to open up questions so that we can# talk about it as a community.
We're not just## being given a message or a single slogan.# We're being given an experience.
And that## experience is raising questions, is opening# up all sorts of topics for debate so that,## when you close the cover of the# novel and you turn to the final page,## you immediately want to seek someone# out and talk to them about it.
That, to me, is the power of literature.
GEOFF BENNETT: You end the book by saying# that you aspire to Morrison's freedom to## be at ease with being difficult.
What does that# freedom look like, especially for Black women?
NAMWALI SERPELL: It's a very tricky time to# be willful, to be unreasonable, to be angry.
These are all ways in which Black women get# relegated to the category of being difficult.## But I think we have to have a faith and a# commitment to the complexity of our experience,## to the complexity of our lives, and to# the incredible complexity of art itself.
Morrison said, when someone considers you# difficult, that's a good sign.
It means that## you have insisted on being taken seriously.
And,# to me, that's what I aspire to.
I want my work## to be taken seriously.
I want to be taken# seriously.
I don't want to be thrown into## a position where I'm here nearly to comfort,# or placate, or translate things for people.
I want to inspire them.
I want to engage# with them, and I want to make them think.
GEOFF BENNETT: The book is extraordinary.
NAMWALI SERPELL: Thank you so much.
GEOFF BENNETT: "On Morrison."
Namwali Serpell, thank you for being he.. NAMWALI SERPELL: Thank you.
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