True North

The lives of two young women, an abolitionist's granddaughter and a fugitive slave girl, intersect on the Underground Railroad in 1858.

True North Cover Amazon

Booklist says: Lasky (The Night Journey) again combines suspenseful fiction with history as she intersects the lives of two 19th-century adolescent girls: Afrika, a run-away slave from a Virginia plantation, and Lucy, a restless young socialite from Boston. While Afrika travels the Underground Railroad, dodging slave catchers and their hounds, Lucy prepares for her sister's upcoming wedding to a prominent New Yorker even though she would rather be helping her grandfather with his abolitionist efforts. The paths of the two girls converge when Lucy discovers Afrika hiding in her grandfather's house after "Pap" has died from a stroke. Together, the two girls embark on a dangerous journey to the Canadian border. Both Afrika and Lucy are, from the beginning, admirable, likable heroines, but the true colors of other characters are not revealed until long after the girls' daring trip. Lasky clearly illustrates the tyranny of slave masters, the support of slave labor in the North, the restrictions placed on 19th-century women and the philosophies of such revolutionaries as Robert Gould Shaw, Abigail Adams and Ralph Waldo Emerson (each of whom plays a minor role in this riveting drama). Telling her story with sensitivity and flair, the author amply fulfills the goal she states in an afterword: to write "within the structures of logic and judicious imagination."

"A gripping story of the Underground Railroad in 1858, told in alternating chapters from the points of view of two teenagers in very different circumstances. 14 year old Lucy is a from a well-to-do family in Boston and is the granddaughter of an abolitionist; Afrika is not much older and has fled slavery in the south in the hopes of finding freedom in Canada. Without overemphasizing or harping on the differences in their life stations, author Lasky wonderfully depicts both girls' struggles with ease and grace. The ending took me by surprise - in a good way!


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