Often shocking, always compelling, Afua Cooper's novel is based on the
life of Henry Bibb, an American slave who after repeated attempts
escaped in 1841 to become an anti-slavery speaker, author and founder of
a Black newspaper. Cooper takes painstakingly researched details about
slavery and weaves an intimate story of Bibb's young life, which is
overshadowed by inconceivable brutality.
At nine years old, Henry is separated from his mother and brothers and
hired out, suffering abuse at the hands of cruel masters so severe he
almost dies. Henry's courageous life is described in intimate detail and
young readers will learn about everyday slave life on a plantation and
in towns and cities, the coded language of slave escapes and the
dangerous routes over land and water to safe houses.
As Henry Bibb moves from boyhood to manhood, he knows that one day he
will "fly away" as in the old legend of the Africans who flew away to
freedom. The first-person narrative, convincingly told in Henry's voice,
traces Bibb's boyhood, marriage, fatherhood and the developing awareness
of his bondage and his determination to break free of it or die.