About This Book
The novel portrays life in slave-holding regions through interwoven stories of enslaved people, white neighbors, and local institutions, contrasting plantation society with the swamp as a refuge. It traces conspiracies, religious gatherings, legal battles, and episodes of violence and flight, following individuals who resist bondage and those who enforce or contest the system. Scenes alternate between domestic moments, camp-meetings, courts, and the swamp's daily life, while moral and legal arguments about slavery are dramatized, including a fictionalized judicial opinion, culminating in trials, escapes, and reckonings that expose the human costs of the institution.
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