The Long Walk: Slavery to Freedom is a riveting, antebellum, historical novel about the social injustice and the enslavement of an intact family, taken from Virginia to Kentucky, to be sold and forcefully separated on the auction block. The saga follows two of the family members from the auction to a farm where they endure a brutal environment. The Long Walk: Slavery to Freedom details the lives of the enslaved and how they were bought, sold, resold, and abused. The protagonist, unwilling to accept her fate, and that of her son, becomes a freedom seeker who choreographs an escape that eventually connects her to the Underground Railroad which puts her on the path to freedom.
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Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 13 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-9972613-4-9 (9780997261349)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Judith C. Owens-Lalude is the great-granddaughter of
George Henry "Pap" Johnson born in 1850 and enslaved with his
mother, Clarissa. They lived on Ben Miller's
600-acre farm in North Central Kentucky,
now less than an hour's drive from Louisville,
Kentucky, where Owens-Lalude grew up and
resided until 2017. After listening to tales told
by her family's closest members about their
ancestors, she wanted to know more and
visited the farm where her ancestors had been enslaved. She strolled
the grounds, reflected at the fireplace hearth where a slave cabin once
stood, wandered along the streams and creeks, and photographed the
barn and other outbuildings that were a part of her great-grandpa's
and his mother's daily world.
Inspired to write a book, Owens-Lalude traveled to her
husband's native Nigeria for a better understanding of the history of
slavery in the Americas. She wanted to know its impact on other
Africans and African Americans, including her family who lived in
Nelson and Spencer counties, Kentucky. She was also intrigued by
the writings of Harry Smith, Fifty Years in Slavery in the United
States and Isaac Johnson's Slavery Days in Old Kentucky. Both
authors were enslaved in Jefferson, Nelson, and Spencer counties
where Owens-Lalude's family was also enslaved and later lived as
freed people.
From these readings, her research, her travels, and her powerful
imagination, Owens-Lalude wrote two compelling novels: The
Long Walk: Slavery to Freedom and Miss Lucy: Slave and Civil War
Nurse.
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