Wednesday, May 24, 2017

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead

Pulitzer and National Book Award Winner - and probably many more.  It is both historical fiction about America at it's worst and a little bit of magical realism that allows Whitehead to play loose with time and metaphor.  Both disturbing and hopeful.  As a child, Cora lives in a antebellum cotton plantation in Georgia.  Abandoned by a mother who fled north, scorned by many of her fellow slaves and selected for frequent abuse by a sadistic "master", she escapes at the age of fifteen.  The underground railroad that carries her north is an actual system of tracks and engines and stations deep underground.  At each stop in her journey, she becomes a leading character in the long history of cruelty.  Lynchings, eugenics, slaughter of whole black communities, occasions of freedom that quickly turn dark - they are all there.  Cora draws strength from her anger at the people who have abandoned and abused her.  She knows she is meant to be free.  There are many thought provoking passages about the notion of prejudice and "manifest destiny" as well as insights into the slave experience. It is a hard history to acknowledge made even sadder by the fact that it sometimes feels more current than historical.

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