I won this book back in March from Joanne of The Book Zombie. Can you believe I haven’t had a chance to read it yet. Me either since it was one of my most coveted books then. My only excuse is my out of control ARC’s.
Then one day recently, my husband Bill asked me if I had The Book of Negroes. I was surprised he asked because he rarely reads fiction. I handed it over to him with the stipulation that he would have to write a guest review of it for my blog.
Without further ado, here is Bill Rose’s Review:
Book of Negroes, the fourth novel by Canadian author Lawrence Hill, is a truly remarkable work of historical fiction. It details the life of Amanata Diallo, who was kidnapped from her home in West Africa when she was only 11 years old, and sold into slavery. The book opens in 1802 when she is living in London, and being wooed by British abolitionists to speak publicly on behalf of their cause. The reader is then led back into her childhood describing an idyllic life in the village of Bayo, where she was born into a Muslim family and learned midwifery skills from her mother. This life is tragically interrupted one night when she is captured with others and led in chains on a three-month trek to the coastal port where they are placed on a slave ship for transport to America.
It is a voyage many will not survive, and at the end of it she finds herself in Charleston on the way to an indigo plantation on the South Carolina coast. The land is completely strange to her, and she only speaks the languages of homeland. Meena (as she is now called) learns English and is eventually put to work “catching babies”. From there we follow her as she is sold to another, seemingly more benevolent owner who teaches her to read and write, skills she masters well. Eventually he takes her to New York where she teaches English to other blacks (slave and free) while the American Revolution begins. The British offer freedom to all slaves who will fight for them, and with the end of hostilities approaching, she is hired by them to record the names and data of those who will be taken to Nova Scotia. She sails with them to finally be formally emancipated.
The life they find there is exceedingly hard, and when Meena is offered passage to England by an army officer sympathetic to the abolitionist cause, she accepts. Though she is now free, she finds London to be a strange place, and still yearns to return home to her village Africa. At the urging of her abolitionist friends, Meena agrees to be resettled in Freetown, a settlement for freed slaves ironically close to the slaving port she was shipped from decades previously. Our heroine is then faced with the momentous decision whether to risk a long and dangerous journey back to Bayo, without even knowing if it still exists.
This is a story punctuated by marvelous historical detail and character development. The numerous cruelties of the slave trade are detailed in ways that will shock the conscience. That its effects still reverberate to present day race relations, comes as no surprise after reading this book. The narrative voice of our heroine matures throughout the novel and adds to its richness. Though I am not normally a fiction fan, I found this novel certainly deserving of the buzz it has generated and a very rewarding read. It is highly recommended.
5/5
Please note: In the U.S.A. this same book is titled “Someone Knows My Name”. Thanks to Wendy of Caribousmom for alerting me to that.
Also reviewed by:
If I missed your review, please leave the link in the comments.
Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.
This sounds like something we should all read – it’s important to remember things like this from the past so we don’t repeat them.
Glad you loved this book too, Teddy! I reviewed it here (although in the US it is titled Someone Knows My Name).
Great review Bill! I loved this book and count it as one of my all-time favourites. Here’s a link to my review: http://lazydaisy0413.blogspot.com/2007/12/book-of-negroes-novel-by-lawrence-hill.html
Glad you enjoyed this book. Thanks for the link.
Fantastic review. I am going to be reading this book soon. It sounds like a powerful must read. Wow.
Lawrence Hill has a very interesting piece in the Toronto Star about black fiction in Canada :
http://www.thestar.com/news/insight/article/684933
If you ever have a giveaway for this book, I’m first in line!
This book sounds great, I will have to check it out too. Thanks for telling us about it!
I won a copy from Joanne at the same time and am this close to finishing it. Your hubby sounds like my wife in that she also prefers nonfiction. However, I was only 100 pages in before I realized how much she’d enjoy it– she’s next in line to read it.
I really want to read this book one of these days!
Yay! I have this out from the library right now, and this has made me even more excited to read it. 😀
Kathy, I agree.
Wendy, My husband Bill wrote this review. We didn’t know that it had a different name in the US. I added your link. Thanks!
Marie, thanks. I added your link.
Heather, your welcome.
Toni, thanks. Bill told me it is very powerful. I look forward to reading your thoughts.
Niranjana , thanks for the link to the article. Both Bill and I found it quite interesting.
Janet, Bill says, it is very worthwhile to read.
John, it sounds like your wife will enjoy it.
Marg, I think we would both enjoy it. It must be good, with Bill raving about it.
Eva, that’s great! It’s fun to raise excitement about books with such merit.
Thanks for linking this review to the party. I enjoyed read it!
-CYM
Pretty cool getting your hubby to do a guest post, Teddy! Thanks Bill, this is one that I will try to get around to eventually.
Great review, Bill! I had not heard of this book, but it is now on my list to read!
CYM, your welcome.
Wanda, I want to get to this one also, It was fun to get hubby to write a review.
Rebecca, if you live in the US, it is a different name, “Someone Knows My Name.
Hmm, haven’t heard of this one before, but it sounds like amust read. Thanks!
Jenny, it is under a different title in the USA, Someone Knows My Name.
Haven’t read it yet and missed the TV adaptation.
Was this story like Alex Hailey’s “Roots”?
No, Roots was generation to generation, whereas Book of Negroes focus is mainly on one woman from capture, slavery, and eventual freedom. I just recently saw the mini series on CBC. They had it on CBC on Demand for no charge, if you get that. It was excellent!