Source of book: Audiobook from the library
This book was recommended by a friend. I listened to it with
three of my kids: my eldest daughter, age 15; and my sons, ages 12 and 10. They
are the ones who were interested in backpacking with me and brother-in-law, so
we listened to it on that trip.
This book is probably not suitable for all children. The
subject matter is difficult, disturbing, and uncomfortable in the extreme. It
isn’t as graphic as it could be, and the history behind the story is even
worse, but some honesty is required. Nothing is gratuitous. Everything is
necessary.
The story was loosely inspired by some real life events and
institutions. The setting is the early American Revolution and the years
before. The Novanglian College of Lucidity was inspired by various
philosophical and scientific societies of the time. The “experiment” to
determine if Africans were as intelligent as Europeans was actually a thing.
The problem, of course, is that those who believed whites were superior
couldn’t actually be persuaded by evidence then any more than they are now.
And, as now, the scales are far from equal to begin with.
The story is mostly told from the point of view of Octavian,
a young African American living in Boston.
His mother was enslaved when age 13, and pregnant with Octavian. The two of
them are purchased by Mr. Gitney, the head of said College of Lucidity,
and he raises Octavian with a classical and musical education. Gitney is fairly
benevolent, and appears to want Octavian to succeed and prove the equality of
the races.
However, things change when the English lord who has been
funding the society dies. His heir comes to see if the society is worth
funding, falls for Octavian’s mom, and tries to convince her to become his
concubine. When she refuses, he attempts to rape her, and things go bad from
there. The College is then thrown on the mercies of a new group of patrons, led
by the villainous Mr. Sharpe, who represents the slaveholding wealthy of the
South who wish to see Octavian fail.
Later in the book, at the outbreak of hostilities, Mr.
Gitney holds a “pox party,” where the participants intentionally infect
themselves with smallpox, in the hope that under ideal conditions, they will
get milder, non-fatal doses. Unfortunately, some die anyway, including
Octavian’s mom. He then escapes, and joins the American army briefly, before
being recaptured. The book ends on a cliffhanger, which I assume will be
resolved in the second book.
As this summary indicates, the subject matter itself is
difficult. The fact of slavery is a blot on our nation, and on humankind in
general. The racism inherent in the American institution is also a fact, and
there is no sugar coating it. The author is pretty darn blunt about it, letting
the various white characters say things that are horrifying to our modern ears,
but which were very much in keeping with the times. This is pretty effective,
since the story is mostly from Octavian’s point of view, and we have to hear
all this racist poison as he would experience it. It truly is an offense against
his humanity. He is considered chattel, and subhuman, and the white characters
are flabbergasted that he can’t see things that way. (Hey, this sounds a LOT
like many
white people today!)
My kids really responded to this book, and are eager to read
(or listen to) the next one. They are thoughtful and empathetic, and appreciate
books like this that speak of history from the perspective of those wronged.
While it may be a bit intense for younger kids, I highly recommend it for kids
old enough to understand violence and oppression.
***
Note on Pox Parties:
These still exist, you know. Particularly for Chicken Pox. I
am, as regular readers know, a
big proponent of vaccination. I suffered through a bad case (although not
life-threatening) of Chicken Pox when I was 12, and am thankful my kids won’t
have to go through that.
The Pox Party in this book is rather interesting. To a
degree, the College had a good point: survival rates would be better for people
in a controlled environment, with what supportive care the medicine of the time
could provide, warmth, food, and water. Certainly better than getting it at,
say, Valley Forge in starvation conditions. But still, quite dangerous, and far
from ideal. In 1775, this was the best they had, though. Smallpox is really
contagious, and was going around at the time. Prevention wasn’t an option, and
the spectre hung over all who hadn’t already survived it and become immune.
It was 21 years later, in 1796, that Edward Jenner proved
the first successful vaccine - and by the time I was born, Smallpox was
eradicated as a result. Here’s hoping we do the same for Polio and Measles and
Rubella and…
On your last sentence, polio is almost gone. If you go to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative website, you will see that less than 50 people have been diagnosed with polio this year. Compare that to 300K just 30 years ago. Credit goes to Rotary Clubs, the Gates Foundation, the World Health Organization, working under the GPEI umbrella.
ReplyDeleteWe are indeed getting close. And yes, props to the fine organizations you have listed.
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