"Sugar in the Blood: A Family's Story of Slavery and Empire" SDS Choice for October
Sisters of the Desert Sun will be reading Andrea Stuart's Sugar in the Blood: A Family's Story of Slavery and Empire for their October selection. Set on the island of Barbados, Stuart shares her family's story and the perspective of slavery in the Caribbean. SDS will join Arizona's Caribbean community for the Caribbean Picnic and Family Day at Kiwanis Park on October 19th, the perfect setting for a discussion on Stuart's epic work. For more information on this and other meetings and events visit us on Facebook, Goodreads, Twitter or email us at sistersofthedesertsun@gmail.com.
From the Publisher
In the late
1630s, lured by the promise of the New World, Andrea Stuart’s earliest known
maternal ancestor, George Ashby, set sail from England to settle in Barbados.
He fell into the life of a sugar plantation owner by mere chance, but by the
time he harvested his first crop, a revolution was fully under way: the farming
of sugar cane, and the swiftly increasing demands for sugar worldwide, would
not only lift George Ashby from abject poverty and shape the lives of his
descendants, but it would also bind together ambitious white entrepreneurs and
enslaved black workers in a strangling embrace. Stuart uses her own family
story—from the seventeenth century through the present—as the pivot for this
epic tale of migration, settlement, survival, slavery and the making of the
Americas.
As it grew, the sugar trade enriched Europe as never before,
financing the Industrial Revolution and fueling the Enlightenment. And, as
well, it became the basis of many economies in South America, played an
important part in the evolution of the United States as a world power and
transformed the Caribbean into an archipelago of riches. But this sweet and
hugely profitable trade—“white gold,” as it was known—had profoundly less
palatable consequences in its precipitation of the enslavement of Africans to work
the fields on the islands and, ultimately, throughout the American continents.
Interspersing the tectonic shifts of colonial history with her family’s
experience, Stuart explores the interconnected themes of settlement, sugar and
slavery with extraordinary subtlety and sensitivity. In examining how these
forces shaped her own family—its genealogy, intimate relationships,
circumstances of birth, varying hues of skin—she illuminates how her family,
among millions of others like it, in turn transformed the society in which they
lived, and how that interchange continues to this day. Shifting between
personal and global history, Stuart gives us a deepened understanding of the
connections between continents, between black and white, between men and women,
between the free and the enslaved. It is a story brought to life with riveting
and unparalleled immediacy, a story of fundamental importance to the making of
our world.
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