Title: She Came to Slay
Author:
Erica Armstrong Dunbar
Read
by: Robin Miles with a Note Read by The
Author
Publisher:
Simon & Shuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 3 hours and 53 minutes
Source:
Review Copy from Simon & Shuster Audio.
Thank-you!
My
kids picked to listen to She Came to Slay:
The Life and Times of Harriet Tubman on a recent family road trip. It was a book that we were all interested in
from parents to the youngest at nine years old.
Luckily, the audiobook lived up to its promise and was one that we all
enjoyed.
She
Came to Slay was written in an easy to understand manner that worked for our
entire family to listen to. There was one
section that did discuss the rape of slaves, but it was tastefully
written. The book covered Tubman’s
entire life from what is known about her ancestors, through her early years, her
work as a conductor on the underground railroad, her work during the Civil War,
and her later life.
One
thing that really stood out to me was Harriet saying that if the myth of the benevolent
slave owner was true, why had none of the escaped slaved she helped or lived
near ever returned to slavery when times got tough in the north? The other thing that really stood out to me
was just how terribly Harriet was treated.
You wouldn’t treat an animal like that, let alone another human
being. It’s hard to understand how
people could treat other people this way.
Harriet was forced to work when she was sick with the measles. She was also forced to work in the field
after a head injury with blood dripping down her face. She was also beaten when trying to sit on a
train with her veteran pass and for refusing to move to another car. Who would beat an elderly veteran?
One
item that has caused marital strife in the past between my husband Ben and
myself is about whether Harriet Tubman should be on the $20 bill. Ben believed that Tubman’s actions weren’t
worthy of being on the $20 bill, but he seemed to change his mind as he listened
to this autobiography. There is more to
Tubman’s story than what you briefly learn in school.
Narrator
Robin Miles was interesting and kept the story moving.
Overall,
She Came to Slay is a great biography of Harriet Tubman for the entire family
to learn more about this amazing American hero.
No comments:
Post a Comment