Answer:
3. She uses her writing to comment on social justice
4. She married a Jewish civil rights lawyer
Step-by-step explanation:
Walker's first book of poetry, Once, showed up in 1968, and her first novel, The Third Life of Grange Copeland (1970), a story that traverses 60 years and three ages, pursued two years after the fact. A second volume of verse, Revolutionary Petunias and Other Poems, and her first gathering of short stories, In Love and Trouble: Stories of Black Woman, both showed up in 1973. The last gives testimony regarding chauvinist brutality and maltreatment in the African American people group. Subsequent to moving to New York, Walker finished Meridian (1976), a novel portraying the transitioning of a few social liberties laborers during the 1960s.
Walker later moved to California, where she kept in touch with her most mainstream novel, The Color Purple (1982). An epistolary novel, it portrays the growing up and self-acknowledgment of an African American woman somewhere in the range of 1909 and 1947 in a town in Georgia.