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The Interesting Narrative and Other Writings. [Unknown Binding]

Olaudah Equiano
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Unknown Binding
  • Publisher: Penguin (1995)
  • ASIN: B0040GH2PG
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Olaudah Equiano
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Inside This Book (Learn More)
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First Sentence
AN invidious falsehood having appeared in the Oracle of the 25th,2 and the Star of the 27th of April 1792,3 with a view to hurt my character,4 and to discredit and prevent the sale of my Narrative, asserting, that I was born in the Danish island of Santa Cruz, in the West Indies,5 it is necessary that, in this edition, I should take notice thereof, and it is only needful of me to appeal to those numerous and respectable persons of character who knew me when I first arrived in England, and could speak no language but that of Africa.6 Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Fergus
Format:Paperback
This penguin edition is a recent full critical edition - and therefore the best, I think, - of the current versions of Equiano's Interesting Narrative. It is edited by Vincent Carretta who in a later monograph (Equiano, the African: Biography of a Self-made Man) questions the author's claim to have been born and kidnapped in Africa and uses documentary evidence to suggest he might have been born instead in the Caribbean islands.
Equiano's turning to Evangelicalism undoubtedly makes the latter part of the book a more difficult read for those who are less interested in the wider history of the 18thC English-speaking world. But this part of the narrative is perhaps the most fascinating because it meshes so well with other 'conversion' narratives of the day (The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England) and helps to place Equiano in the English world of William Wilberforce and John Newton and so to explain why he would come to write such a book in the first place. For this reason, to my mind, no history of England which deals with the latter half of the eighteenth Century should ignore this book.
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21 of 25 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Olaudah Equiano provides an excellent account not just of his life as a slave, but also how an ex-slave was treated in the eighteenth century. He led an extremely eventful life, but had a luckier start than most because he was bought by owners who actually treated their slaves as humans rather than animals. It is made plain in this an other first hand accounts (eg Mary Prince) that these were the exception rather than the rule.
There is always the impression that once a slave obtained his freedom his troubles were over, but Equiano shows us that that was not in fact the case. In many instances he had goods stolen from him by white men in the West Indies and had no recourse to the law in those islands.
He had an adventurous life as a sailor, travelling at one stage on a British Arctic expedition in the bomb-ketch Racehorse, not realising that an obscure midshipman in the companion ship Carcass was to go on to be known as Admiral Lord Nelson!
I was riveted through much of the narrative, but it became turgid at the end as Equiano discovered religion in a big way and the final chapters largely consist of biblical extracts, prayers, and poems about his religious feelings. In his description of his attitude to Christianity, he became insufferable, with an attitude of superiority to his less Christian brethren and an overwhelming concern for the fate of his immortal soul.
I would rate this book more highly if it were not for the final chapters which I consider tedious to all but the extremely religious. Nevertheless, the book is enjoyable and highly educational. I would recommend it to the private reader and as a text for a school history class.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
By CeCe
Format:Paperback
Whilst this was a fascinating book, and the authors account vivid, I feel that it lacked its focus towards the end due to his conversion to Christianity. It seemed to make the author forget his horrors and at some parts he was almost thankful to have been a slave because he found God!! I feel this was probably a tactical approach to make readers at the time favour his story and help to abolish slavery, but i felt that it distracted from what it was really about which was the horrors of slavery. I would have loved to seen what became of him, as I felt the book ended rather abruptly. In particular his marriage to a white lady at that period in time. However, it was a good read and a must for all those interested in that period in history. Another book to read would be about Mary Prince, which I feel is more frank.
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