Winner of the Booker Prize
Liverpool, 1752. William Kemp has lost a fortune in cotton speculation,
and must recoup his losses if his son is to marry the wealthy woman whom
he loves. His last resort is a slave ship, one that will take him to the
Guinea coast, where he will trade for human cargo, then embark on the
infamous Middle Passage. When disease ravages the ship and the African
prisoners mutiny, William's profit-seeking venture falls apart. Slaves
and sailors alike will join together to found a utopian community on the
coast of Florida--not knowing that the vengeful, younger Kemp is in
pursuit. Unsworth's tour de force is a profound meditation on the sacred
hunger--the greed--couched within human nature, animating the slave
trade. It is a novel that transcends its setting, illuminating larger
truths that resonate to this day.