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Subject
- Douglass, Frederick,--Fiction
- Abolitionists--United States--Fiction
- United States--History--19th century--Fiction
- Garrison, William Lloyd,--Fiction
- African American abolitionists--United States--Fiction
- United States--Social conditions--Fiction
- African Americans--History--19th century--Fiction
- Enslaved persons--Maryland--Fiction
- Enslaved persons--United States--Fiction
- Equality--United States--Fiction
- Freed persons--Fiction
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Availability Label | Location | Shelfmark | Availability | Reservations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Calvin Park Branch | Fiction Morri | On loan until: 14/Jul/25 |
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Summary & Details
Full Record Details Table
Title Statement | Frederick Douglass: a novel / Sidney Morrison. |
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Author | Morrison, Sidney |
Publication | Portland, OR: Hawthorne Books & Literary Arts,2024. |
Edition | First US edition. |
Extent of Item | 672 pages ; |
ISBN | 9780998825793 (hardcover) |
Other Number | pr07432018 |
Bibliography | Includes bibliographical references (pages 667-672). |
Summary | "Sidney Morrison has skillfully written an epic novel of historical fiction based on the life and times of Fredrick Douglass. Although Douglass wrote three autobiographies, he included scant details of his personal life with his wife, Anna Murray Douglass, and five children; his lengthy relationship with English abolitionist, Julia Griffiths; followed by an extensive relationship with Ottilie Assing, a German reporter then living in the United States who died by suicide shortly after the death of Anna Douglass and Frederick's remarriage to his younger white secretary, Helen Pitts. Morrison deftly constructs a psychologically complex portrait of the historical icon who lived during a perilous time in American history before and after the Civil War as an enslaved man who escaped tyranny and established himself as an extraordinary orator, intellectual, writer, newspaper owner and editor. As United States Marshall of the District of Columbia, Frederick Douglass was the first African American confirmed for a presidential appointment by the U.S. Senate. He then served as minister and consul general to Haiti. The assassination of President Abraham Lincoln after the Emancipation Proclamation left Andrew Johnson in the White House while the South descended into chaos, disenfranchisement of Blacks, and terror during Reconstruction. Douglass' fierce crusading continued and he was fundamental in achieving voting rights for Black men. In 1895 Frederick Douglass died suddenly renowned as the nation's most recognized Black activist. Despite Douglass' significant contributions, Reconstruction failed to establish Black equality. One hundred and twenty years later white supremacy continues to occupy the American psyche and impact modern politics on flagrant display during President Barack Obama's two terms and the subsequent Trump years. After the murder of George Floyd, Black Lives Matter continues the activism inspired by the words and example of one of the Founders of the movement, Frederick Douglass"-- |
Subjects & Genres | |
By Topic | Abolitionists--Fiction--United States |
African American abolitionists--Fiction--United States | |
African Americans--Fiction--History--19th century | |
Enslaved persons--Fiction--Maryland | |
Enslaved persons--Fiction--United States | |
Equality--Fiction--United States | |
Freed persons--Fiction | |
By Name | Douglass, Frederick,1818-1895 |
Garrison, William Lloyd,1805-1879 | |
By Location | United States--Fiction--History--19th century |
United States--Fiction--Social conditions | |
By Genre | Historical fiction |
Biographical fiction | |
Novels |