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The Price of a Child

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An intimate, gripping novel of the antebellum Underground Railroad, based on the true story of a valiant Philadelphia freedwoman—a debut novel from the author of the “stunning memoir” Black Ice (New York Times).
"A stunning achievement ... a deeply engrossing story." —The Philadelphia Inquirer

With Price of a Child—the story of Ginnie Pryor (cook, mistress and servant to a Virginia planter) and her struggle with slavery in 1855—Lorene Cary continues has created a work that elevates the reputation she created with Black Ice, her memoir which won her comparisons to Maya Angelou and Richard Wright. In a novel that examines the price of freedom and the value of a child's life, Cary has created an authentic American heroine—a woman who finds voice for the appalling loss and bitterness of her past, and who creates within herself a new humanity.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 1, 1995
      Cary transfers the clear narrative voice that marked her memoir, Black Ice, to her fiction debut. In 1855, Jackson Pryor, a powerful Virginia planter, departs for a foreign diplomatic post with his favorite slave, 32-year-old Ginnie; to discourage escape, he permits only two of her three children to accompany her. Nevertheless, when they are delayed in Philadelphia, Ginnie seizes the chance to be rescued by an antislavery group, whose members, much to Pryor's embarrassment, intercept the three slaves in broad daylight on a public ferry pier. Hiding outside the city with the free Quick family, Ginnie soon changes her name to Mercer Gray and falls problematically in love with Tyree Quick, who's unhappily married and forced to care for his enfeebled father. She also must confront the ironies of freedom, such as the fact that the underground railroad is financed in part by black slum lords whose treatment of employees and tenants has its own peculiar mixture of paternalism and cruelty. Mercer and her children flourish, however, despite their constant fear of capture; and, after Pryor forces a highly publicized trial of her liberators, Mercer becomes a popular speaker on the abolitionist circuit. But she can't put her abandoned child out of her mind, and she and Tyree struggle to resolve their impossible relationship. Mercer is a complex antebellum woman whose internal conflicts, even amidst Cary's abundant period detail, are strikingly modern. Helped by a compelling cast of fully drawn characters, Cary has written a first novel of impressive depth and texture in a literate and provocative voice.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 10, 1996
      Set during the antebellum period, Carey's first novel tells of a woman who escapes from slavery only to be haunted by the memory of the baby she had to leave behind.

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  • English

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