Reviews tagging 'Sexual assault'

Washington Black by Esi Edugyan

2 reviews

jesshindes's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional inspiring sad tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.5

Whoever wrote the back-cover blurb for 'Washington Black' did it no favours (in my opinion) by describing it as 'inspired by a true story'. It's a pretty outlandish tale - the protagonist goes from a Caribbean slave plantation, to the Canadian arctic, to London, to the Moroccan desert - and the whole time I was reading it at least 5% of my brain was trying to deduce which bits could possibly be the true ones. Had there really been a guy who helped his British scientist boss with an early hot air balloon prototype? Or maybe the bit where he invents the aquarium was the bit that was based on life? And then once I finished and let myself read an interview with the author, Esi Edugyan, it turned out that the inspiration was one specific nineteenth-century servant involved in the Tichbourne Trial, who had been enslaved in the Caribbean before becoming a family servant and moving to Australia. So that felt a bit anticlimactic!

This is a shame because I think Edugyan's point - what it would be like, how might it destablise you to grow up as a slave on a plantation knowing nothing other than that environment, never expecting or perhaps even imagining what a different future might be like, and then suddenly to be transplanted into quite a different environment on the other side of the world - is actually an interesting one. This question of identity and self is at the heart of the novel and our hero/narrator, Washington, is a sympathetic character, as he needs to be for the book to work. The landscapes and settings that Edugyan conjures are often absorbing and the first section of the novel on the slave plantation is bruising in its brutality. I did enjoy the book. But I think ultimately I found this less compelling than some of the other historical fiction I've been reading over the past couple of years. The variety of Black's journey is part of the point, but the book felt a little episodic to me and I wasn't totally sure what some of the key relationships were doing. The last section in particular felt a bit underpowered to me - I think the book lost some of its momentum as it went on. I like Edugyan's ambition, though, and I would (will) watch the TV adaptation that is apparently coming to screens at some point soon.

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thenonbinaryc's review against another edition

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dark sad medium-paced

4.5


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