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Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
- Narrated by: Mia Ellis
- Length: 8 hrs and 14 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Harriet Ann Jacob's autobiography documents her life as a slave and how she attained freedom for herself and her children. Harrowing in its descriptions of sexual abuse, Jacob's slave narrative is notable for the appeal it made to abolitionist women to open their eyes to the realities of slavery. Deemed too shocking for reading audiences at the time, the book was shelved before it was published in 1861 near the start of the Civil War.
What listeners say about Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Karen M. Curry
- 11-17-20
Will not finish it....
I bought the audiobook excited to find a narrative by a woman who had actually experienced slavery. But, as a Black woman, I quickly found it extremely disappointing. In most instances, the intention of her writing seems be to differentiate herself, as a mixed-race woman, from the "common negro". She takes pains to explain how her life was not like the poor negros and she was never beaten nor subjected to harsh labor. To further distance herself from other slaves at one point she explains how she "blackened" her face to elude capture and more than once referring to her children's faces as "white". Overall, it seems the writer only considers herself a slave when it benefits her.
Also, I'm averse to lionizing a mother who, although never being beaten nor subjected to harsh labor, chose to live hidden under the floorboards or in dungeons just feet away from her children. Should that be celebrated? At first, I wondered why this woman's name is not known in history. After listening to her story, I understand why. I've chosen not to finish it.
37 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 06-28-20
Captivating and Enlightening Accounts
I could have listened to this story straight through if there was opportunity. It was as if I was listening to my own great-grandmother tell me passages from her own life. If you want to study slavery at a level that no American public school will dare teach it, read this memoir. If you dare to feel the pain and trauma of another, read this memoir. It paints vivid pictures without even having tell you the actual colors: yet you see them clearly. To me, the best way to learn history is to hear it from those who experienced it. Simply put: I recommend this work.
21 people found this helpful
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- Duck
- 08-02-20
unbelievable but true
the story reads as fiction but a little research reveals all the people and actions are true.
9 people found this helpful
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- Audrey
- 06-23-20
very accessible and important book!
A very important book. I am so glad that I have finally read it. Seeing slavery on the inside makes our nation's history real.
9 people found this helpful
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- bshurn
- 01-18-21
Wow
I couldn’t imagine being a slave but had I been born during that time I would have been. This is just a minor glimpse of the darkness of this time and what could be if we don’t learn from it.
8 people found this helpful
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- KaylaDee
- 12-31-20
Emotional Rollercoaster
Such a great book, well written and well read. It took me on an emotional rollercoaster as I got lost in "Linda's" world.
6 people found this helpful
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- Kathy Olson
- 09-07-20
Excellent history from someone who lived it!
Black lives matter!
I think everyone studied slavery in social studies or American history in school but it’s nothing like what you hear read to you about it from a slaves point of few. She shares her life with you so eloquently that she becomes somebody you adore, trust, cry with and want to help her and her family. She’s loving and timid but grows into an amazingly strong free woman. The suffering she endured is certainly more than I could ever imagine myself being able to experience let alone overcome.
The narrator changes her voice to each character using accents, pitch and tone so that you get a picture in your mind of what that person looks like, how they’re dressed, as well as what their lot in life is. Very very well done!
This would make an awesome movie miniseries.
5 people found this helpful
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- Mark
- 01-19-21
Women raise children without men
With so much to add about the systems put in place to hlod people back. This book is a eye opener to someone keeping the mind to go forward in the Spirit of freedom.
3 people found this helpful
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- Robert
- 11-29-20
Wonderful!
This was a great story told through the character's experience and this gave the feel of being right there in the moment of the events. The narrator was never boring or monotone and the character distinction was superb. I highly recommended this book!
3 people found this helpful
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- Keanya Wilson
- 12-21-20
Great book
This book was awesome. To read about the complexities of slavery and what one would do is crazy
2 people found this helpful
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- Sulmare
- 01-25-19
fabulous book
A really interesting story, totally absorbing , so glad I purchased this book, would recommend
2 people found this helpful
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- Michele A Walsh
- 06-19-20
A must-read.
While many passages are emotional reading, this autobiography is inspirational. A strong woman in the face of impossibly inhumane circumstances, loved and lived as an example for modern Americans. May her wisdom continue to enlighten future generations to pursue equality and justice for all.
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- ParisMK
- 09-09-19
A story that every American should hear.
This was a well-written, well-read first-person account of a harrowing journey to freedom. This isn't the most dramatic, or the worst enslaved person's narrative that you'll ever hear, but I think that's what makes it so powerful. She herself doesnt experience the level of sexual violence and extreme brutality of the 'peculiar insitution' that we associate with this type of book. She speaks plainly of the daily struggles of retaining ones humanity while enduring absolute inhumane circumstances. As a woman, as a mother as a HUMAN, her story touched my heart.
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- Theres
- 01-15-19
A unique insight and well narrated
A book of general interest. It never really captured me and drew out any emotion for a life that was quite profound and well beyond anything we in today's day and age could really comprehend. Interesting and well presented though.