3.92 AVERAGE


I liked this one a lot. It intrigued me most of the way. (I wasn’t a fan of the ending. In fact, I don’t know, really, what it meant.) I loved how the author put words together to create the meaning that often had me awed. 1830s from Barbados to the far North to England and then to Morocco. I also listened to some of this one - great reader on the audio version.

I've had this book for a few years and I truly thought I wasn't going to end up reading it. Not sure if for any other reason, than I don't usually pick up books I've had that long and finally read them. I'm so glad I did pick this one up though. It's a heart wrenching and beautiful story.
challenging dark reflective sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

This book was very well written, complex, and thought provoking. Highly recommend!

De enige kans op vluchten is de vlucht.
Maar dan moet dat ding wel willen vliegen.

'Washington Black' is een boek met een cover die zoveel verwachtingen oproept dat het bijna alleen maar kan tegenvallen. Maar neen: het boek is zoveel meer dan alleen wat de cover suggereert. Het is Jules Verne meets Baron von Munchausen meets Roots (Wij Zwarten).

Washington Black is een jongetje dat eerst jongen en dan man wordt. Razendsnel. Omdat het moet.
Washington Black is een slaaf die mens wordt, maar altijd een beetje slaaf (van zijn verleden) zal blijven.
Washington Black is een geketend en getekend lichaam rond een gehavende geest, maar ook een vat vol talent. Zijn angst is tastbaar, zijn onzekerheid verlammend, maar de drang om te ontsnappen aan de de gevangenis van zijn afkomst én van zijn lichaam stuwt hem voort.

En sleept u, de lezer, mee.





Parts of the book were beautiful and interesting, and others a bit more boring. However, if you take the whole thing as a look at the constant search for home & belonging, it becomes a (somewhat fantastical) story about a young boy who spends 18 years figuring it out.

What a nice journey through a portion of the life of Washington Black. A thought-provoking journey to a certain point in western history when so much invention was budding. Also reminder to never overlook the potential each human being carries, no matter what you or society thinks of them, no matter their own backgrounds or challenges, or physical or social differences.

Would have given it 5 stars but I felt that the last 60 pages lost a lot of the momentum developed in the first 4/5 of the book. A classic case of an ending that was no ending at all. Too bad as otherwise I quite enjoyed the prose and the story.

A friend got me a book subscription as a Christmas gift, and Edugyan's Washington Black was the first selection. I'm so glad for the subscription because it brought this book to my radar. For such a long, the narrative most invoked about slavery was one of the happy plantation and simpler time--a nostalgia almost for a bygone era (with movies and novels like Gone with the Wind and North and South, I think this kind of whitewashed narrative really dominated into the 1990s, if not beyond). Edugyan's novel depicts the utter precariousness of an enslaved individual's life, subject to the nature and moods of those that saw other human beings as nothing more than an investment. Even after Black leaves the Caribbean plantation, the specter of slavery continues to haunt him across continents. Superbly written, the reader becomes immersed in Black's world and his quest, first for survival and then for a kind of closure. As Black's journey moves from a third continent to a fourth one, the story does lose a bit of momentum, making the final chapters of the book somewhat less compelling to read in comparison to the first half of the book. All in all, though, one quickly becomes engrossed in Black's story, hoping for the resolution for which he travels far and wide.

A well-crafted, fast-paced story with memorable characters. Edugyan has a gift for description and transporting readers to a vast array of places and time.