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Frederick Douglass

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Frederick Douglass was the most prominent African American of the 19th Century and Sidney Morrison has created a mesmerizing historical novel richly detailing his life and the Civil War Era. This portrayal of Douglass distinguishes him as one of the founders of American democracy instrumental in ending the institution of slavery from which he escapes to become a fierce abolitionist, gifted orator, and newspaper publisher of The North Star. Douglass collaborates with William Lloyd Garrison, John Brown, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and the Underground Railroad, as well as Presidents Abraham Lincoln to Grover Cleveland and becomes the first African American to hold esteemed political positions such as U.S. Marshal of the District of Columbia and Minister to Haiti.


What makes this portrayal of Douglass unique is that it takes readers beyond the public persona by also detailing the women in his life: Anna Murray Douglass, instrumental to his escape, becomes his wife and the mother to his five children; English abolitionist, Julia Griffith, works with Douglass until a scandalized community whispers about an extramarital affair and she returns to England; German journalist, Ottilie Assing, dies by suicide after years of waiting for Douglass to marry her and instead he marries a white abolitionist 20 years his junior, Helen Pitts, following Anna's death. These stories are central to understanding the great man as a fully complex human whose life was rich in conflict, drama, and suspense. Frederick Douglass dedicated his life to racial equality and this novel is an homage to him as a significant figure in U.S. and African American History.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 22, 2024
      Morrison debuts with a well-rounded portrait of abolitionist Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) that focuses on his early life in slavery and the support he received from his wife upon entering the national stage. Morrison opens at an 1844 abolitionist gathering in Massachusetts, where Douglass is challenged by an audience member who doubts he had ever been a slave. In response, Douglass removes his shirt to display the scars inflicted on him while in bondage. Morrison then rewinds to 1836, when Douglass, then known as Frederick Bailey, is enslaved in Baltimore and falls for a free Black woman named Anna Murray. After Anna helps him escape two years later, he educates himself and becomes vocal in the antislavery movement. Morrison is especially good at giving a voice to Anna, who was illiterate and left no journals or letters to draw on, but is depicted here as inquisitive and quick-witted (“Oh, don’t worry, Mr. Bailey, since we are not courting, you haven’t damaged your chances with me”). Readers will also see another side of the venerated abolitionist, whose infidelities include an affair with a white German translator. Historical fiction fans will be gratified. Agent: Steve Scholl, WaterStone Agency.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2024
      A true superstar and hero, Frederick Douglass engineered a daring escape from slavery with the help of his lover and future wife, Anna. A brilliant autodidact, he reinvented himself as a preacher, orator, writer, and blistering antislavery activist, eventually rising to the highest levels of political society. Yet in his impressive first novel, Morrison refocuses Douglass' story on the personal and emotional, imagining his complicated and often torturous relationships with his enslavers, mentors, and lovers. He bears the scars, literal and emotional, of enslavers who coddled him while torturing his family. His late-life reconciliations with them are tinged with hypocrisy as his former abusers eagerly welcome the now celebrated Douglass into rooms he was only permitted to clean as a child. Douglass is tokenized as the Great Black Exception and condescended to by the likes of William Lloyd Garrison, who insist they know what is best for African Americans. As a magnetic lecturer and a fierce advocate for women's suffrage, Douglass attracts the attention of numerous white women, notably British abolitionist Julia Griffith and German feminist Ottilie Assing, relationships he pursues under the eye of the indomitable Anna. While Anna gives him freedom, family, and a home, he credits Julia and Ottilie in his autobiography. A wrenching and insightful examination of a triumphant yet tragic man.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2024

      DEBUT In this epic historical novel, retired educator Morrison fictionalizes the entire life of abolitionist Frederick Douglass, from his time as an enslaved child worker to his daring escape as a young man and his ultimate rise to prominence and government appointment. Moments like Douglass's need to flee the country after John Brown's attack on Harper's Ferry, and the joy felt at the official announcement of Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, are vividly recreated. The fictional approach allows Morrison to fully embody characters only mentioned on the margins of historical accounts, such as Douglass's wife Anna, an illiterate free woman who stood by him throughout his long-term emotional and physical affairs with women such as British abolitionist Julia Griffith and the German journalist Ottilie Assing, who are both also richly characterized here. There are times when the novel reads like a history, and some readers may wish for more storytelling verve than strict historical comprehensiveness, but the book is always informative. VERDICT Morrison grapples with Douglass in all his complexities, extolling his greatness while also grappling with his human fallibility in this detailed and well-researched book that will both educate and spark discussions. Readers of Marie Benedict will be entertained.--Jon Jeffryes

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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