Ronnie Mackie: To small
United States on May 27, 2023
Sonia Rhooms: I was happy with the front picture, but I wish I has ordered this book in large print. I did not realise the print was so small.
United Kingdom on Oct 17, 2021
Anonymus: Equiano's narrative is a must read for anyone interested in the Black Lives Matter movement. The story is gripping and important and the Penguin edition of the text excellent.
Germany on Nov 14, 2020
jettereader: This book arrived in excellent condition.
Canada on Aug 02, 2020
jon: Excellently written great first hand account of all that went on a must read for those who want to know the true history of the slave trade.
United Kingdom on Nov 06, 2019
Michael Ditmore: For me the first chapter was best. That's where I learned the most about the sustainable ecology of the lands Equiano came from before he was enslaved. These kinds of societies seem to be the last chance for a close examination of how relatively peaceful societies preserve ecological, practices that yielded stable societies prior to the second wave of colonization.
The second wave of colonization, with its guns and numerical superiority was able to overcome the peoples of the Interior. The period of the musket perforce restricted colonial activities to the outer fringes of the African continent: after the Advent of the rifled musket and rifle, colonists and Colonial forces were finally able to completely dominate the Peoples of Africa. This domination might truly be the African Holocaust.
United States on Sep 29, 2018
Phoebe: To call Olaudah Equiano's autobiography an "interesting narrative" is an understatement. It is the soberly written but amazing account of his life, first as an African slave in the West Indies, then later on as a well-travelled freeman who became an outspoken opponent of slavery, a public speaker and a writer. Equiano finally settled in eighteenth-century England, where he found a home. His own moral triumph over unspeakably cruel past abuse and over many grievous broken promises is not the least of this remarkable man's achievements. This book is no novel : it has the ring of truth to it. You will find it difficult to put it down once you start reading it.
France on Apr 20, 2015
Stephen Cheney-Rice: The Interesting Narrative of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African, is indeed an interesting autobiography that is perhaps the best known piece of Romantic era black British antislavery writing or slave narrative.
One of the most interesting things about it is that it was encouraged, published, and propagandized by white British abolitionists in the ultimately successful movement to end the slave trade in Great Britain. Another interesting aspect of the Narrative is its demonstration of the sophistication of language and the deftness of thought of its author, who was enslaved by fellow Africans in what is now Nigeria, sold to English slave traders, served on board ships and became an able seaman in the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars, saved his money and rose into the mercantile class, and, at the end of his full life left a considerable fortune to his daughter.
This Penguin Classics edition, introduced and edited by Vincent Carretta, includes copious but not overwhelmingly detailed notes and appendices.
If you are interested in race, class, war, Romanticism, and a compelling story, this is a book for you.
Stephen Cheney-Rice
United States on Jun 02, 2011
Luis Mansilla: For someone who have read something about Slave Trading, the life of Olaudah is a unique source of what was like to be a Slave in that period. The book published in 1789, tell a remarkable story of survival, a life of sufferings, humilliations, the struggle for getting his freedom, his fixation with England, the search for knowledge and spiritual salvation. Most of the book is interesting indeed but similar to a review made at the time, I agree that "the long account of his religious sentiments and conversion to methodism, is rather tiresome". We will never know whether Equiano came from Africa or not, but his account about the "middle passage" is by far the more touching.
United States on Mar 20, 2010
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano: Revised Edition | The Spy and the Traitor: Uncovering the Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War | The Last Bookshop in London: A WWII Story of Hope and Resilience | |
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B2B Rating |
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97
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Sale off | $5 OFF | $4 OFF | |
Total Reviews | 10 reviews | 918 reviews | 685 reviews |
Customer Reviews | 4.5/5 stars of 358 ratings | 4.7/5 stars of 30,572 ratings | 4.5/5 stars of 17,270 ratings |
Best Sellers Rank | #458 in Discrimination & Racism#5,359 in Classic Literature & Fiction#9,591 in Literary Fiction | #2 in Espionage True Accounts#3 in Political Intelligence#4 in Intelligence & Espionage History | #42 in World War II Historical Fiction #107 in 20th Century Historical Fiction#570 in Literary Fiction |
Language | English | English | English |
Item Weight | 10.9 ounces | 11.8 ounces | 8.5 ounces |
Publisher | Penguin Classics; Revised edition | Crown; Reprint edition | Hanover Square Press; Original edition |
Literary Fiction (Books) | Literary Fiction | Literary Fiction | |
ISBN-13 | 978-0142437162 | 978-1101904213 | 978-1335284808 |
Discrimination & Racism | Discrimination & Racism | ||
ISBN-10 | 0142437166 | 1101904216 | 133528480X |
Paperback | 448 pages | 384 pages | 320 pages |
Classic Literature & Fiction | Classic Literature & Fiction | ||
Dimensions | 5 x 0.8 x 7.7 inches | 5.07 x 0.95 x 7.94 inches | 5.33 x 0.79 x 7.97 inches |
Dawn Rolon: Information in the book
United States on Nov 03, 2023