The first story is one of discovery and authentication on the part of Henry Louis Gates, Jr.. This story will be fascinating to scholars and others interested in how original manuscripts are found and in the problems and procedures for authenticating them as artifacts as well as resolving other issues surrounding their authorship. This mystery story continues because Gates is on a mission in this section to find the "real" Hannah Crafts. I kept reading quickly, following his strains of research with almost as much excitement and suspense as I did in reading Hannah's narrative itself. Hannah mentions names that Gates traces back to real people, and he gradually uncovers dots, then connects them for the reader, showing just how exciting scholarship of this kind can be as a human endeavor. As an American literature scholar myself, I finished Gates's narrative wanting to run out and search for Hannah Crafts as well [if I only had the time and energy with all the other mysteries I'm already trying to solve].
The second narrative, of course, and really the most important, is Hannah Craft's novel itself, which is thought so far to be autobiographical, in which a first person narrator describes her experience as a house slave and her eventual escape from a plantation near Wilmington, NC, via the Underground Railroad to New Jersey. The novel is a quick read, like a popular novel today with traces of the 19th C. sentimental novels of its day, with suspense and Dickens-like characterizations. There is a noted motif of "passing" (as one race for another and one gender for another) that is fascinating to trace throughout the story. Perhaps the great "pass" of all is the unanswered question about the racial identity of the author, a question that bothers some greatly that it is even being asked and is critically important to others that it be answered as accurately as possible.
Gates includes material that makes this version of the book "teachable" as well (he plans a later scholarly edition)--a listing of the library holdings Crafts is presumed to have had access to; passages from Dickens's BLEAK HOUSE set side by side with echoes from Crafts's novel; chapter notes by the editor that point to issues in similar narratives by Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs, etc.
Whether you eventually "buy" Gates's claims about its authenticity and importance or not, the book provides a focal point for discussions of many issues, both for the general reader and the specialist in American literature, American studies, history, gender studies, textual studies, and many others. It's also a peek inside the work of literary scholars, which reveals just how much fun our detective work (often thought to be dry and dusty by others) really is.
I say, read it, and let the conversations, and thought-provoking arguments, begin!
~Prof. Connie Ann Kirk