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Song of Slaves in the Desert: A Novel of Slavery and the Southern Wild
 
 

Song of Slaves in the Desert: A Novel of Slavery and the Southern Wild [Hardcover]

Alan Cheuse

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 528 pages
  • Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark; Min edition (Mar 1 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1402242999
  • ISBN-13: 978-1402242991
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 16.2 x 4.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 794 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #717,703 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

The tangled history of slavery and the enduring stain it left upon a nation founded on the principles of freedom and equality is evocatively illuminated. (Booklist )

An imaginative, multigenerational exploration of the world of Southern slavery...A complex, richly detailed story. (Kirkus )

Product Description

<p> 'The Legacy of Slavery<br> The Loyalty of Family<br> The Lure of Love' <BR><BR>He has no history in the rice fields, no background in being a master. Plantations are as foreign to him as the African plain that birthed the slaves his uncle owns. Surely, though, he knows his own heart. She has no say in his decisions, his day, his life. She doesn't even have a say in her own. But when Nathaniel Pereira plunges into the murky mysteries of freedom and survival in the suffocating Southern heat, Liza can see how she might change her life forever.<BR><BR>Tracing the thread of slavery from sixteenth-century Timbuktu, 'Song of Slaves in the Desert ' explores one man's struggle to understand a world where honor is in short supply yet dignity cannot be sold. His mission in peril, his mind nearly undone, Nathaniel's obsession binds him to his fate more tightly than chains ever could.<BR><BR>A"Cheuse shows that in one way or another, we all experience slavery, and that freedom is never given but must be taken at all cost. The book's epic vision is deeply human and humane."<br> Helon Habila, author of 'Waiting for an Angel ' and 'Measuring Time' '' <BR><BR>"Alan Cheuse, one of our most respected men of letters, has written a daring, provocative novel. Some readers will be captivated by his depiction of the horrors of slavery and Jewish involvement in the peculiar institution, and others will be troubled and perhaps even offended, for the subject of race in America is always controversial, but no one who reads 'Song of Slaves in the Desert ' will emerge from its pages unaffected."<br> Charles Johnson, author of the National Book Award winner 'Middle Passage' '' <BR><BR>"A novelist's dream is to conjure up a whole world, one the reader can tumble right into and inhabit. I fell into Alan Cheuse's 'Song of Slaves in the Desert ' like that. I confess I felt a twinge of envy at Cheuse's success, his fully imagined song and its people. But the envy immediately gave way to gratitude for having had the chance to enter and treasure the world he's made here."<br> Josephine Humphreys, author of 'Dreams of Sleep' '' <BR><BR>"Cheuse passionately evokes a vanished world of master and slave, Jew and Gentile, all hurtling toward the tumult and destruction of war. The novel is full of the loss and longing that come with a world divided forever, people from their people and from their past. Fascinating."<br> Lynn Freed, author of 'The Servants' ' 'Quarters' <BR><BR>A masterful writer skilled in both accuracy and nuance, Alan Cheuse grapples with the nether parts of our history, the murky boundary between right and wrong, and the wild tendency of love to break free.<BR><BR>For more than two decades, Alan Cheuse has served as NPR's "voice of books." He is the author of four novels, including 'The Grandmothers' Club, The Light Possessed' , and 'To Catch the Lightning ' (winner of the 2009 Grub Street National Prize for fiction), several collections of short stories, and a pair of novellas. He is also the editor of 'Seeing Ourselves:Great Early American Short Stories ' and coeditor of 'Writers Workshop in a Book.' </p>

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A fresh take on the painful history of slavery in America, Feb 14 2012
By Civis - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Song of Slaves in the Desert (Paperback)
Novels about slavery in America must confront a painful history. What makes "Song of Slaves in the Desert" such an original and compelling read is that it confronts two painful histories at once--the slavery of Africans brought to labor in plantations in the antebellum South, and the slavery of Jews in the time of the Egyptian pharaohs.

Two people, Liza and Nathaniel, one a beautiful African slave girl and the other a young Jewish New Yorker, meet some years before the outbreak of the Civil War. When the book begins Nathaniel is carefree, a little naïve, a dreamer who longs to tour Europe. Before he can set sail for the continent his father sends him to Charleston to visit his uncle's rice plantation, so Nathaniel can learn about the business. At first Nathaniel is resentful about having to go to Charleston, and can't understand why he has to. But once he arrives in Charleston and meets Liza, who was born into slavery and works as a housemaid in his uncle's home, Nathaniel finds himself losing his heart to her. As he struggles to understand how his uncle, whose Jewish ancestors suffered enslavement in Egypt, can choose to become part of the slaveholding economy, Nathaniel faces a difficult decision: should he return to New York and try to forget Liza? Or betray his family trying to free her?

This novel makes big leaps in time and space: it begins in Timbuktu, Africa, and moves across vast geographies to tell the story of how Liza's ancestors came to be enslaved. The chapters alternate between Liza's family history and Nathaniel's story, occasionally interspersed with meditative chapters entitled "In My Margins," in which the narrator wrestles with the great subjects this book is concerned with: freedom, free will, love. Another reviewer here describes this book as "modern and inventive," and that sounds right to me. There's a wonderful chapter where Yemaya, an African goddess, bickers with Yahweh. It all unfolds naturally, as part of the action, the way Athena and Zeus quarrel in the Iliad.

"Song of Slaves in the Desert" is an epic ride through some of the darkest periods in human history. The story of Nathaniel and Liza is so engrossing, and the language so heart-rendingly gorgeous, I enjoyed every moment of the journey.

8 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Inventive, contemporary work deserves contemporary analysis, April 25 2011
By T. Donnelly - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Song of Slaves in the Desert: A Novel of Slavery and the Southern Wild (Hardcover)
On Cheuse's latest work I posted a similar comment to The Washington Post after reading a review. Now, I post a similar comment for contemporary readers and critics here:

Congratulations to Cheuse on creating an inventive, modern and epic novel and then having critics try to analyse it through the most conventional, archaic lenses. That is like trying to put a square peg in a round hole. Wonder why not one critic has yet to comment on the chapters, "In My Margins" which ask the reader and all of mankind through something akin to poetry to take a step back, weigh in, and look at what we have become and where we are going. I ask our contemporary critics and contemporary readers this: What do we want from a novel? What do we want from art?
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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