In this new and original interpretation of the barbaric world of slavery
and of its historic end in April 1807, the parallel lives of three
individuals caught up in the enterprise of human enslavement--a trader,
an owner, and a slave--are examined. John Newton (1725-1807), best known
as the author of Amazing Grace, was a slave captain who marshaled his
human cargoes with a brutality that he looked back on with shame and
contrition. Thomas Thistlewood (1721-86) lived his life in a remote
corner of western Jamaica and his unique diary provides some of the most
revealing images of a slave owner's life in the most valuable of all
British slave colonies. Olaudah Equiano (1745-97) was practically
unknown 30 years ago, but is now an iconic figure in black history and
his experience as a slave speaks out for lives of millions who went
unrecorded. All three men were contemporaries; they even came close to
each other at different points of the Atlantic compass. But what held
them together, in its destructive gravitational pull, was the Atlantic
slave system.