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Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass
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Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass an American Slave (Bedford…

by Frederick Douglass

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Bedford Books (1993), Paperback, 163 pages

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Douglass’s memoir really amazed me. I was expecting something more alone the lines of Uncle Tom’s Cabin where the reader is brow-beaten with the message – I think this style was needed in the time it was written but makes for a difficult read at times today. The memoir, however, is a very practical piece. He tells his story frankly, without delving into morality, because the simple facts of his life are enough for one to form an opinion. A really beautifully told story – I highly recommend it to anyone who hasn’t read it yet. ( )
  janepriceestrada | Nov 16, 2009 |
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas, was AMAZING. I really feel like I missed out in high school because this wasn't required reading along with Uncle Tom's Cabin. Frederick Douglas was incredible articulate and explained, very reasonably, what it was like to grow up a slave in Talbot County, Maryland, to live in Baltimore, and what the social conditions were. His denunciation of empty and hypocritical religiosity in the appendix was spot on and can ring true even today.

Frederick Douglas is an example of someone who was able to use adversity as motivation for self-improvement at whatever cost. Efforts to dissuade him from learning to read and write made him that much more committed to not just learning, but to doing so excellently. Efforts to keep him from escaping only made it inevitable that he would do so. Frederick Douglas can serve as an inspiration to so many of us and an example of perseverance and discipline. He was smart enough to recognize that when something wrong is going on, it's not enough to endure, but one must make efforts to end the problem.

Highly highly recommended, and I wish it were required reading for everyone in school everywhere. ( )
1 vote bfertig | Aug 13, 2009 |
This is the short biography of Frederick Douglass. He writes about his life as a slave, how his mother died, how he learned to read, how he was beaten and starved, and how he decided to escape. He enlarged on this story later, but in this version of the story, he doesn't give any details of his flight to freedom. But you certainly get a vivid and horrible picture of slavery. I thought his words about the religious hypocrisy of his former masters was especially illuminating.

After reading this, I was surprised really that more slaves did not make the attempt to escape. He says that he never had any idea of escape until after he learned to read and realized what else was out there in the world. That may have been one reason. Douglass himself says that he almost changed his mind when he realized that his escape would mean the loss of contact with all his friends. I'm sure that such ties to friends and family was another reason that most slaves stayed put.

I wanted to read more about Douglass and what happened to him after he wrote this book. He was a very eloquent, even passionate man fighting for the cause of freedom and equal rights for both women and for slaves. This is a great story for young people to read, as it would help them understand how brutal slavery really was. Also important today, when there are still horrible acts of violence and injustice all around the world. ( )
2 vote cmbohn | Jul 11, 2009 |
Douglass had a talent for storytelling, and his life story is incredibly powerful, telling how he came out of slavery and educated himself. It truly shows how people who want to achieve more in life can, regardless of circumstances. ( )
  gaialover2 | Jun 15, 2009 |
A ground-breaking autobiography, made all the more vivid when you consider that it was written by a man who was forbidden from learning how to read. Douglass' remarkably restrained account of the horrors of slavery gives extra power to the narrative—especially when he discusses how an appearance of piety can hide the worst of sins. I will have to keep an eye out for a biography of Douglass' later life; I am very interested to know more about what became of him after he escaped to freedom. ( )
  siriaeve | Jun 12, 2009 |
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I was born in Tuckahoe, near Hillsborough, and about twelve miles from Easton, in Talbot country, Maryland.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0486284999, Paperback)

Douglass's graphic depictions of slavery, harrowing escape to freedom, and life as a newspaper editor, eloquent orator, and impassioned abolitionist.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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