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THINGS PAST TELLING by Sheila Williams

THINGS PAST TELLING

by Sheila Williams

Pub Date: March 15th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-06-309707-0
Publisher: Amistad/HarperCollins

Freed from slavery, an indomitable woman narrates her century of life.

This sweeping novel begins with its narrator, Momma Grace, living in Ohio with her family five years after the end of the Civil War. She’s a formerly enslaved woman, at least a century old, and she has a remarkable story to tell. She begins at the beginning, with her golden childhood in West Africa, an idyll cut short when slave traders kidnap the girl called Little Bird and one of her older sisters. Williams skillfully gives the reader a child’s-eye view of the confusion and cruelty of being marched for days to be loaded onto a ship for the Middle Passage. But Little Bird’s life soon takes another surprising turn, one that will be largely good luck for her. The ship is raided by a pirate crew led by a formerly enslaved captain called Caesar, and he quickly notices Little Bird’s facility for languages. Renamed Maryam, she becomes his translator and spy, and also, on a remote island where his crew's families live, she becomes apprentice to a midwife and healer. That luck doesn’t hold; after a few years she ends up in the slave markets and begins a long life of bondage. The skills she learned on Caesar’s island make her particularly valuable—when she’s sent to deliver babies, White and Black, and to treat the sick, it’s the slave master who collects the pay for her services. As she is sold from one plantation to another, she forms warm friendships and romances, even marrying once (although it’s illegal for the enslaved to marry). She has several children and, one way or another, loses most of them—some of them sold away by her enslavers, who see their slaves’ children as commodities. Momma Grace’s story is often a brutal one, but it’s full of adventure and romance, courage and resilience. It’s no apologia for slavery but a moving portrait of its fully human victims.

A woman tells of her long, rich life and the terrible impact upon her of slavery.