
This book, by Julius Lester, was written to accompany paintings by Rod Brown, exhibited under the title, “From Slavery to freedom.” The book is a combination of facts and narrative where the author addresses the reader. I cannot say that I was entertained; it was too serious a subject for that. I did enjoy the book though, and I think it showed me a great deal of slavery. I think I learned more about the feelings of slavery from this book than from any other. The artwork that is shown with the book is very powerful. Julius Lester wrote an introduction for the book and I think one line from it gives a better description of the paintings than I ever could: “His work was a visceral response to slavery that eschewed photographic realism for a raw power that gave flesh to soul.” After looking at the painting in the book, I would have to agree with this description. They are very powerful and evocative. They seem to pull the emotions from you before you have time to process what is happening in the painting. This would be a great book to use in the classroom to teach about slavery. It does not just focus on the perspective of the slave, but disuses many view points.
Image copied from Amazon.com






