This is the remarkable story of Phillis Wheatley, who is born into an
African family of griots, or storytellers, but captured by slave raiders
and forced aboard a slave ship, where appalling conditions spell death
for many of her companions. Numerous sharks follow the ship, feeding on
the corpses of slaves thrown overboard.
Weakened by the voyage and near death in a Boston slave market, Wheatley
is bought by a kind family who nurses her back to health and teaches her
to read and write. Soon her mistress recognizes that the girl is a quick
learner and talented. At the age of 12, a torrent of poetry begins to
flow out of Wheatley. Proud of her achievements, her mistress organizes
readings in Boston's finest parlors and drawing rooms, and Wheatley's
fame spreads. But even when many in Boston are calling her a prodigy and
a genius, some remain unsure that a slave should be able to write, much
less write poetry. When Phillis travels to London she is a media
sensation, feted by the cream of English society. A book of her poems is
published, and she finally gains her freedom.
This amazing story, wide in scope, is based on fact and told
convincingly from young Wheatley's point of view.