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  The Schedule for July through Dec. 2025
  
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By Lynn · 1 post · 47 views
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  Call for Nominations - Reading List, January-June 2026
  
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    By Lynn · 7 posts · 19 views
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What Members Thought
  
              
            
In general, I prefer finely written, taut, compact literary novels to big sprawling ones. I had to get past that in order to appreciate this book. I certainly learned a lot. It was a riveting, even if sometimes not quite believable, plot. I feel that the writer really did his research. But I also felt as if he was never going to let me forget it. He was going to move his characters through an arc that would make me learn everything that he’d learned or die trying. So while it was all very intere
  
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This is an excellent book, and well worth reading.
It is the second book I've read in the last 6 months that dealt with slavery during the Revolutionary War period. The first was The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing. Both novels featured Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of the Virginia colony, who promised slaves that they would be made free if they fought with and worked for the British against the rebels. The rebels, of course, were white property owners who were fighting against British ty ...more
      
  It is the second book I've read in the last 6 months that dealt with slavery during the Revolutionary War period. The first was The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing. Both novels featured Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of the Virginia colony, who promised slaves that they would be made free if they fought with and worked for the British against the rebels. The rebels, of course, were white property owners who were fighting against British ty ...more
  
              
            
No book is perfect, but I think this one comes close. I hate to start a review with negatives, but it will probably be easiest that way. Aminata Diallo is exceptional, and so is her story. That's the only thing that nagged about the story. Was she too exceptional? Were some of the circumstances just too unbelievable in terms of miraculous good timing and good connections and just plain historically? More uncomfortably, why was it that Aminata's keen mind was always referred to with such incredul
  
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Absolutely, breathtakingly, wonderful, compelling. I will be recommending this book to every one I know. It tells a particular story about the slave trade that I wasn't aware of - how some 3,000 slaves (former and, sadly, current) were moved to Nova Scotia. 
The writing is clear and crisp and Hill has created an unforgettable heroine in Aminata Diallo.
Really loved it. ...more
      
  The writing is clear and crisp and Hill has created an unforgettable heroine in Aminata Diallo.
Really loved it. ...more
  
              
            
The story (told in first person) of Aminata, born in Africa in the mid 1700's, captured and sold into slavery. Richly detailed and, of course, heartbreaking. But not sentimental, not preachy.
  
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        Jan 30, 2014
      
        Becca
      
        rated it
        really liked it
           · 
          review of another edition
          
        
            Shelves:
              black-history-and-lit, 
              canadian
          
    
              
            
This is an excellent book! 
          
        
      
  
  
        Mar 24, 2009
      
        Dottie
      
          marked it as books-to-check-out
    
      
  
  
        Jun 06, 2009
      
        Theresa
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Oct 29, 2009
      
        Paula
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Jan 16, 2010
      
        Monica
      
          marked it as maybe-someday
    
      
  
  
        Jun 11, 2010
      
        Gail
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Sep 20, 2011
      
        Debbie
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Nov 09, 2011
      
        Sara
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Nov 15, 2011
      
        AmandaLil
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Jun 08, 2012
      
        Robert
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  
  
        Sep 12, 2014
      
        Maureen Carter
      
          marked it as to-read
    
      
  












