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Speak Right on: Dred Scott
 
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Speak Right on: Dred Scott [Hardcover]

Mary E. Neighbour (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Neighbour's thoughtful but inert debut novel, a fictionalized biography of Dred Scott, depicts the slave whose suit for freedom was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1857, a legal and political decision that nullified the Missouri Compromise and helped spark the Civil War. The novel's plodding treatment of Scott's life spans his birth into slavery in 1799 to his death as a free man in 1858 (he was bought and released by a former owner, not the courts), covering Scott's servitude to Peter Blow and then Dr. John Emerson. Scott works as a jockey, cotton picker and valet for the relatively benevolent Blow family before financial troubles compel them to sell him to "Doc Master," an army surgeon he ably assists at various frontier posts. Neighbour imagines Scott as a small, quick-witted, storytelling man who speaks in wise aphorisms: "When I think on running, it ain't 'cause I see myself as a slave—it's 'cause I see myself as a man." Scott and his wife, Harriet, petition Emerson's widow (née Sanford), for freedom. Denied, the Scotts use the "once free, always free" doctrine (Scott lived in free states with Emerson) to launch his famous court battle, a legal dispute Neighbour treats with conscientious detail. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Dred Scott's legal challenge to slavery, reaching the Supreme Court and prompting the infamous ruling that led to civil war, made him the most famous slave in U.S. history. This novel offers a fictionalized account of what Scott's life might have been like, and in essence what the lives of many slaves might have been like, from the Middle Passage through the beginning of the national conflict over slavery. Alternating between a third-person account that includes Scott's grandmother's memories and Scott's own first-person perspective, Neighbour deftly draws a life leading to the legal challenge. With the aid of two young white men who were virtually raised by Scott, he argues that when his recently deceased owner, an army doctor, moved the slave and his family from slave state to free state, he changed their status. This is an absorbing look at the relationships--voluntary and involuntary--as well as the nuances of slavery that provoke human emotions from nobility and loyalty to greed and selfishness. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Toby Press (February 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159264144X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1592641444
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #719,636 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reviewed by Sabrina Williams, February 14, 2007
This review is from: Speak Right on: Dred Scott (Hardcover)
When I was initially offered the opportunity to read a novel about Dred Scott, I was eager to expand my limited knowledge of such an important figure in our nation's history. I felt I owed my ignorance to either a failed public school system or my own inattention in American History class. As it turns out, the reason behind my lack of knowledge is most likely due to our lack of information as a country. Because of Scott's slave status (or lack of status) and because most slaves, Scott included, were illiterate, there are few recorded documents regarding his life despite the incredible influence he had on the destiny of the United States of America.

From the court documents and other various resources that are available, we know that Dred Scott was a slave who sought freedom through legal means. With the assistance of the sons of his former master, Scott took his case to the Supreme Court to sue for freedom for himself and his family. In this monumental court ruling, it was decided that because blacks were not considered American citizens, they did not have the right to sue. Though Dred Scott remained a slave, the sons purchased the family from their owner and set them free. While in Scott's situation, he seemed to have fought a losing battle, in actuality, the ruling regarding his own freedom enraged abolitionists and set the acts into motion that led to the election of Abraham Lincoln to the Presidency and consequentially, the Civil War.

Mary E. Neighbour has picked up where history leaves off with her 2006 novel SPEAK RIGHT ON: DRED SCOTT A NOVEL. Neighbour takes the pieces of Scott's story and fills in the gaps to present a picture of the person Dred Scott might have been. Though a work of fiction, Neighbour has such a skill for breathing life into characters, the reader sees through the eyes of Dred Scott as if reading from Scott's own journal. Had he been literate, Scott himself could have written the book as an autobiography. It is both a celebration of tradition and family, and an outlet of mourning of lost love and freedom.

Through his grandmother, Scott became a griot, or African storyteller. To ensure the heritage of his family was preserved after his death, he related his tales to his daughter, Eliza, to be recorded. After both have passed, younger daughter Lizzie finds herself sharing the stories with her own son, Harry.

The author begins the stories from Scott's perspective, as if the reader were looking over the journal he and his daughter created. As the book progresses, the author moves back and forth between Scott's words and the elaboration of a narrator. The two flow so smoothly together the reader really doesn't notice the transition between the two. The reader has no trouble at all deciphering the slang and vernacular that would have been used during the time period. It is difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction, which shows that Neighbor has proficiently fused them together to create the image of one man's experiences.

The story progresses chronologically through Dred Scott's life, from his birth through adolescence and finally to the troubled man he becomes. Experiences that might have shaped Scott's character, from the horrific to the inspirational, are punctuated by his own thoughts and reactions. The reader is not spared from the injustices slaves endured. Brutal beatings, rapes, and torture are woven in to the chapters as they would have been in Scott's daily life. Neighbour provides some relief in the form of Gran, Scott's grounding force and mentor. Gran provides Scott with steady words of wisdom and sometimes harsh awakenings to reality. "Big and strong makes the white folk nervous. Big and black be half of what got your papa sold away. I give thanks every day that some white man ain't likely to look at you and feel threatened by the sheer might of you."

The reader will be surprised to find this is Neighbour's debut novel, as the writing style is that of an accomplished author with years of experience and published works. Not surprisingly, her short fiction has won numerous awards. In SPEAK RIGHT ON, she has given voice to an inanimate name in the pages of history. Through her words, the reader becomes privy to the thoughts and emotions of an historical icon. History truly comes alive, thanks to Mary E. Neighbour.


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mary E. Neighbour---write right on!, March 25, 2007
This review is from: Speak Right on: Dred Scott (Hardcover)
Neighbour weaves a compelling tale around the facts of Dred Scott's noteworthy life. Her talent to tell his story in his imagined dialect adds to the charm of this poignant novel. Her writing drew me into Dred's life so that I felt I was experiencing the horrors of slavery and the struggle to win his freedom through our courts. My family,friends and I were captivated by Neighbour's recent speech at the Library of Congress to mark the 150th anniversary of his Supreme Court decision.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoughtful telling of a fascinating man's life..., July 17, 2006
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This review is from: Speak Right on: Dred Scott (Hardcover)
I loved how the book itself flowed, sort of like Dred's stories. Neighbor did a great job of creating a rhythm and cadence not only to Dred's voice, but to the book itself. The book is a refreshing change from the typical (dry) historical novel, where everything is a bit at arm's length. With this book, you really felt like you were there. Best of all, you could actually relate to these mythic historical figures. It's so easy to forget that they're people. Neighbor does a good job of reminding us that they were real people with loves and sorrows beyond the historical records.

For my money, there is no better way to learn history than to read a book like this - a book that puts flesh and blood to the bare bones of your average history book.
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