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Frederick Douglass by Mona Kerby β€” book cover
Slavery & Abolition - Biography, United States - Slavery & Abolitionism - History, African American Civil Rights Leaders - Biography

Frederick Douglass

by Mona Kerby
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Overview

By telling his story, that slavery was wrong Frederick Augustus Bailey Douglass helped to change the history of the world.

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Editorials

Hazel Rochman

Written with dramatic immediacy, this illustrated biography in the fine First Books series brings to a middle-grade audience a strong sense of the great abolitionist and writer. This can't replace Michael McCurdy's illustrated "Escape from Slavery: The Boyhood of Frederick Douglass" (1994), which contains selections from Douglass' first autobiography. But Kerby describes not only Douglass' youth in bondage and his exciting escape, but also how he eventually bore witness against slavery as writer and speaker. She mentions that he made mistakes and that some of his solutions to civil rights issues were controversial. The design is attractive, and the pictures are well chosen, though an occasional caption sounds like a study question. As a slave, Douglass secretly learned to read, and the power of literacy underlies this biography: Kerby shows how, in writing his story, Douglass affected the lives of untold numbers of Americans.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1994
Publisher
Franklin Watts
Pages
64
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780531201732

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