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Up from freedom : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

Up from freedom : a novel / Wayne Grady.

Grady, Wayne, (author.).

Summary:

"Virgil Moody vows to never be like his father, a slaveowner. He moves from Savannah to New Orleans and takes Annie with him. While he comes to think of her as his wife, she reminds him they'll never be equal. When their son Lucas is taken from them, Moody will travel through a country on the brink of civil war searching for Lucas, while trying to reconcile his past sins."--Provided by the publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780385685115 (paperback)
  • ISBN: 0385685114 (paperback)
  • Physical Description: 344 pages ; 23 cm.
  • Publisher: [Toronto] : Doubleday Canada, 2018.
Subject: Race relations > Fiction.
African Americans > Fiction.
Slavery > Fiction.
Man-woman relationships > Fiction.
Genre: Historical fiction.

Available copies

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Nelson Public Library F GRA (Text) 3514830029316 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Portage la Prairie Regional Library AF GRA (Text) 3675000207537 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Rossland Public Library FIC GRA (Text) 35162001007092 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Salt Spring Island Public Library FIC GRA (Text) 33123009617482 Fiction Volume hold Available -
Smithers Public Library F GRA (Text) 35101011021230 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Squamish Public Library F GRA (Text) 33110003270665 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Terrace Public Library GRA (Text) 35151001071141 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -
Whistler Public Library WHISTLER WRITERS FESTIVAL 2018 (Text) 33987001165173 On Display Volume hold Available -
100 Mile House Branch GRA (Text) 33923006019370 General Fiction Volume hold Available -
Broadway Library PS 8613 R337 U64 2018 (Text) 33109010314938 Stacks Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2018 August #1
    *Starred Review* All the complexity of race and relationships is laid out in Grady's novel, which is set in the days just before the Civil War. Virgil Moody, son of a plantation owner from Savannah, is strongly against slavery and moves with one of his father's slaves, Annie, to New Orleans and then on to Rio Brazos, Texas. Canadian writer Grady's evocative prose brings to life the parched cotton fields, and his characters are at once understated and powerful. Plot twists guide Moody to Freedom, Indiana, with Tamsey, a former slave, and to the realization that being well-intentioned is not enough when the lives of others are at stake. Grady's historical tale captures all the social turbulence and personal tragedies associated with being enslaved in the South and a freeman in the North. Race is never irrelevant, and liberty is never simple. The extent to which blacks and whites are intertwined is laid out in a brilliant trial scene involving Tamsey's son and his wife. This is a moving and eye-opening reminder of history's deep scars. In the best tradition of Toni Morrison and Colson Whitehead, Grady brings home the truth that there are no simplistic ways to combat and overcome deep-rooted hate and fear. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
  • PW Annex Reviews : Publishers Weekly Annex Reviews

    Grady (Emancipation Day) poses provocative questions about the legacy of slavery in this uneven novel. Virgil Moody doesn't want anything to do with his father, a brutish slaveholder lording over his plantation in Savannah, Ga. When Virgil leaves for New Orleans in the 1840s, he takes Annie, an enslaved woman he is convinced would otherwise face a gruesome fate at his father's hands. A few months after they start their new life, Annie's pregnancy begins to show, but she is hesitant to reveal who fathered her child. Virgil treats her son, Lucas, as his own, and the years pass. As a young man, Lucas falls in love with an enslaved woman and runs away with her, and Annie kills herself. Virgil embarks on a journey across a country to find Lucas, during which he meets Sarah and Leason, a couple facing legal action for an interracial relationship, and a former slave named Tamsey who, with her family, is trying to outrun the Fugitive Slave Act. They offer him a chance to reexamine his own complicity and an opportunity to fight against the system that raised him. The book is sometimes choppy and would have benefited from more fully-developed secondary characters, especially given their roles in launching Virgil's emotional, spiritual, and physical journey. Though thoughtful, the novel lacks the poignancy needed to help Virgil's redemption fully land with the reader. (Aug.)

    Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly Annex.

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