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The Book of Negroes is an award-winning, bestselling historical novel by Lawrence Hill that chronicles the harrowing journey of Aminata Diallo, a young African woman enslaved and transported across continents in the 1800s. Praised for its vivid storytelling and emotional depth, it offers a powerful exploration of slavery, survival, and resilience, holding a 4.6-star rating from over 3,500 readers.
| Best Sellers Rank | 162,250 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 34 in Slavery Biographies 67 in Civil War Biographies 2,358 in Women's Biographies |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (3,556) |
| Dimensions | 12.7 x 3 x 19.8 cm |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0552775487 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0552775489 |
| Item weight | 348 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 512 pages |
| Publication date | 1 April 2010 |
| Publisher | Black Swan |
R**E
An emotional roller coaster ride..
I’m a little lost for words at the moment. I think I have just finished the best book I have ever read so far. When my friend first recommend the book to me I did have my reservations as I wasn’t sure whether it would be my cup of tea as it is about black slavery and bound to be very historical and political which is very different from the fluffy romantic stuff I usually read! From the very first pages I knew this was going to be an amazing read and I would be taken on a journey. Indeed I was and I feel shattered just reading it! The story centres around a young woman, Aminata Diallo and her family, who is brought to London, England, in 1802, by abolitionists who are petitioning to end the slave trade. While she is there she is asked to write an account of her life story which included being abducted from her family at age 11, seeing the death of her mother and father, and being marched in a coffle of captives to the coast along with others from her village. Aminata manages to survive the passage to America because she is able to apply the knowledge and skills passed on to her by her parents, especially the ability to “catch” (i.e., deliver) babies and to understand some African languages. I don’t want to give too much away is it is a book everyone should read. The imagery in the book is just stupendous. I could picture every track she walked on, the ship she sailed on and the disgusting conditions she and her fellow slaves were made to endure. The book just flows easily from one chapter to the next and not once did I ever feel lost. I was there the whole way. The book is also home to some wonderful quotes that have really struck a cord with me. “Beauty comes and goes. Strength, you keep forever” “That, I decided, was what it meant to be a slave: your past didn’t matter; in the present you were invisible and you had no claim on the future” imagine that as your outlook on life? It’s so upsetting to read. ‘It doesn’t matter what we call your soul, what matters is where it travels and who uplifts it’ The book is full of them but I especially love the last one. As long as you keep your strength and your faith the rest will sort itself out. It’s all about inner beauty which Aminata clearly displays throughout the book. A fantastic read that won't disappoint!
S**G
What an education!
THIS book really lived up to its reputation for me. I loved it and could not put it down. I read it in two sittings and devoured every single word. The reader knows, by reading the jacket, what this book is about, and it does not disappoint. While it gives a fictional account of one woman's survival as a slave, from her home in Africa as a child, through America, back to Africa and then to England, it makes it easy for the reader to imagine the lives of the real slaves and what they had to endure. Not just the physical brutality but the emotional and mental torment inflicted upon these people who are first stolen from their homes by their own race, and then kept enslaved by white masters from a country and culture totally alien to their own. To keep them 'in their place' they are often separated from husbands and other family members (if they have been able to stay with them thus far), but the worst act by far of these slave owners is the removal of children from their mothers. How many adults are there in the world today whose grandmother or great-grandmother had her baby wrenched away from her. The tragedy has reached down through generation after generation. Like me, you may think you know a lot about this subject, but I still found a couple of things to surprise me, most especially the role of the British in the so-called 'repatriation' of thousands of slaves. It's a part of British history that deserves to be taught in schools. Very well written. I give it the highest recommendation.
L**L
Moving and thought provoking
I cannot use the word 'enjoyable' for this book. I could use many other words to explain how this book made me feel. It was deeply moving and at times horrific and it made me feel ashamed that one human being could carry out such atrocities to another person because of the colour of their skin. It was well written and even though it is fiction there is a strong element of actual facts woven into the story. Once you start reading it you simply do not want to stop.
A**R
Heart wrenching
It hurt to read this, but I couldn’t put it down. Although a work of fiction, it carries a lot of historical fact…..it’s indeed amazing how barbaric the so called “civilised” were, and continue to be.
R**P
My Best Ever Kindle Choice !
A powerful historical account of an incredible woman's journey, from being captured at the age of 12,from her family and tribe to slavers, to a life of toil and opression for survival. Lawrence Hill presents Aminata, the most powerful literary heroin I have seen created . Based on historical factual events of what thousands of Africans endured less than three centuries ago, with no choice. This follows Aminatas painful journey from captivity in the mid 1700s , to her final days as an older lady helping abultionists in London in 1802. The narrative, voice and senses brought on by this Canadian writer is unique. This is a tragic and mesmerising novel which nearly brought tears to my eyes. An incredible womans travels for survival , written in the first person, spanning five decades as she travels across lands and oceans as a 11 year old girl slave to South Carolina - USA where she endures life as a slave she moves to New York, then eventually over the boarder to Nova Scotia Canada to become a free woman. Her desperation to return to Africa is some what fulfilled with more tragedies. This has been the most sattisfying novel I have read this decade, I noticed it recently as the illustrated edition at a book shop around Young Street area Toronto and was drawn to it and had to download it to my Kindle , its my best ever Kindle choice . I'll definitely be reading other Hill novels but no it'll be tough to find one to match The Book of Negroes.
M**E
Excellent bouquin qui aborde cette période particulièrement pénible de l'histoire américaine de manière totalement différence de Roots, j'ai nettement préféré ce livre-ci
O**F
There are some books you don't feel qualified to review. Here am I, a middle aged, Australian woman who, although I have faced gender discrimination in my life, have never remotely dealt with anything like the challenges faced by our heroine, Animata Diallo. Yet, I felt strongly connected to her. Her love of language, her dignity, her spirit and love of family - all these things I can relate to. To me, she was a strangely modern character, well ahead of her time, strong, outspoken, reflective but not once during the book did I feel that Lawrence Hill portrayed her unrealistically. On a side note, I find that the fact that Hill penned his protagonist as female is interesting in itself - he certainly "captures" the female psyche well! Lawrence Hill has done his homework and, in doing so, has educated and enlightened me. I had little knowledge of the African Slave trade. Sure, I knew that people were captured from different language groups, bound together and shipped to wherever they would fetch the highest price whilst facing unspeakable cruelties and indignities, but that was about it. I didn't know anything about daily life on the plantations, the Book of Negroes, the shipment of Loyalists to Nova Scotia and other destinations, the establishment of Sierra Leone. I had seen Slaves as wretched people and, undoubtedly they were but I hadn't realised the extent to which they were able to form communities, comfort and nurture each other and tenuously keep in touch with others through the underground "fishnet" system. To say that they often triumphed over adversity would be an understatement. Yet, their losses and the humiliations inflicted on them were mind numbing. On considering what Animata lost, gained back, lost again, all the while enduring uninagineable hardship, it was difficult to see her surviving and yet she did - magnificently so. At the risk of spoiling other readers' enjoyment of her story, I will only say that her survival is only one of the uplifting events in this book of sorrows. The writing is spectacular but never inaccessible. Lawrence Hill tells this epic tale simply. Written in the first person and in a narrative style (both styles I usually steer clear of), it is never dry or dull and doesn't intimidate the reader. And his writing is poetic. How could you not cry when you read something like "Englishmen do love to bury one thing so completely in another that the two can only be separated by force: peanuts in candy, indigo in glass, Africans in irons"? I did have a couple of minor issues with the ending of the story - it was a bit "neat" for me and felt a bit rushed (as if Hill had a publishing deadline to meet or something) but those issues didn't diminish my overall reading experience one little bit! In summary, to those readers who long to read something of substance, READ THIS BOOK. You will learn so much about the lives of the slaves ripped from their homelands and those born into slavery. You will also be uplifted by the resilience of the human spirit and what it's capable of accomplishing. But you won't just learn - you will also get to read a well researched, well written, rollicking good book! And those are few and far between!
M**E
No es la historia mil veces leida, tiene un alcance mucho más amplio y al ser basada en hechos reales tiene mucho encanto
K**I
I never knew this book existed until I started seeing the newly released book with the television show cover coming up across my Facebook news feed. At the very same time my daughter was reading Underground to Canada in her grade 7 Language class and she had heard about the television show and book. She came home from school and said she wanted the book. (she is an extremely advanced and avid reader). I ordered the book from amazon and added it to my goodreads to read shelf. I Noticed it had an exceptional rating. Now as far as ratings go you might love a book that I turn out to dislike, or I might love a book that you may dislike. So I try not to choose a book based solely on its rating. But I have several friends and family members who read this book and said it was well worth the read. It was very well written. First I should say that this book is a work of fiction, but even though the detail in this book does an excellent job of detailing what life was like as a slave. It is about slavery but even more then that it is about one woman’s journey from being snatched in Africa, to her journey into slavery, through slavery, and beyond. The story begins in a time where she is an older lady and wants to write her own autobiography. She wants to write it herself because she wants it to be accurate. Lawrence Hill does an exceptional job bringing her story to life with vivid details through Aminata’s eyes. Aminata Diallo was snatched in West Africa as an 11 year old child and forced to walk for months to sea where she would then board a ship and cross over to become a slave in South Carolina. Aminata proves to be an exceptionally talented person even from the young age of 11 she was already ‘catching babies’. As the story progresses she becomes more and more literate and more determined to fight for not only her freedom, but the freedom of all slaves. I won’t go into any more details, don’t want to spoil anything for anyone who has not read this book yet. This was one of the best books I have read in a long time and more than deserved the 5 star rating I gave it on Goodreads.
M**N
Fascinating history.
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