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Review #17238 - Dated: 12th of November, 2016 Author: kymmage |
I've been reading My Name's Not Friday recently. I was drawn to the book mainly because of it's striking cover. The cover art is really bight, and focused on the title. I opened the book and read the first page. When I felt compelled to turn the page, and read on I knew that the book had me.
I took it to work with me and I read it during breaks. I found that I was dragging my feet to come back to my desk every time I opened it up. The story was so captivating. In the end I had to take it home and finish it, because it was distracting me at work. I would sit at my desk and be doing some spreadsheet work and then suddenly I would start to think "what if"s about Samuel and his brother, and the slaves at the Plantation.
What happens to Samuel is terrible. There is a very strong good vs bad theme drawn between the two brothers. I'm not sure that Joshua (the brother) is bad, and it was hard as a parent to see the treatment of the orphans. It's a time period where corporal punishment is in force, and slavery is the norm in the Southern states of America.
I often felt sick about some of the things the characters had to go through. The unfairness of being sold into slavery. The treatment of a whole race of people, being no better than livestock. The fact that a slave family, can be broken up without any thought for the parents or siblings. Not even being allowed to read or to learn shocked me too. But I'm sitting in a privileged time.
This was not the first book I have read set in this historical time period. But it was the most modernly written. For this reason it was more accessible than Uncle Tom's Cabin or Huckleberry Finn. There are heavy themes around God and Christianity, religion and spiritualism. This was fine with me, but it might be a bit much if you don't tend to expose yourself to those messages. The thing is, the book is set in the 1860s and church and religion is important to the characters.
This book would suit an advanced reader, and I would recommend it to teenagers. It would be a great read for anyone who likes historical novels. Anyone who is interested in learning more about the American Civil War, and some of the history of slavery in America too.
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