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Underground Airlines Audio CD – Unabridged, July 5, 2016

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 4,054 ratings

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It is the present-day, and the world is as we know it: smartphones, social networking, and happy meals--save for one thing: the Civil War never occurred.A gifted young black man calling himself Victor has struck a bargain with federal law enforcement, working as a bounty hunter for the US Marshall Service. He's got plenty of work. In this version of America, slavery continues in four states called "the Hard Four." On the trail of a runaway known as Jackdaw, Victor arrives in Indianapolis knowing that something isn't right--with the case file, with his work, and with the country itself.A mystery to himself, Victor suppresses his memories of his childhood on a plantation and works to infiltrate the local cell of a abolitionist movement called the Underground Airlines. Tracking Jackdaw through the back rooms of churches, empty parking garages, hotels, and medical offices, Victor believes he's hot on the trail. But his strange, increasingly uncanny pursuit is complicated by a boss who won't reveal the extraordinary stakes of Jackdaw's case, as well as by a heartbreaking young woman and her child who may be Victor's salvation. Victor himself may be the biggest obstacle of all--though his true self remains buried, it threatens to surface.Victor believes himself to be a good man doing bad work, unwilling to give up the freedom he has worked so hard to earn. But in pursuing Jackdaw, Victor discovers secrets at the core of the country's arrangement with the Hard Four, secrets the government will preserve at any cost.Underground Airlines is a ground-breaking novel, a wickedly imaginative thriller, and a story of an America that is more like our own than we'd like to believe.

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4.2 out of 5 stars
4,054 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and thought-provoking. They praise the writing quality as well-crafted and articulate. The visuals are described as vivid and creative. Readers describe the characters as sympathetic and emotional, describing them as humane and unforgettable. Opinions differ on the plot twists, with some finding them interesting and tightly woven, while others feel they lack consistency and there are plot holes.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

198 customers mention "Readability"175 positive23 negative

Customers find the book engaging and captivating. They describe it as an interesting alternative history novel that keeps their attention. Readers mention the story is believable and thought-provoking.

"...Most folks reading this already know this is alternative history, based on the premise that there was no Civil War in 1861 and that slavery..." Read more

"...of "Underground Airlines" slips from a well-paced, believable story in the North to a chaotic, underexplained cascade of events when Victor..." Read more

"This was our book club selection for the month and I very much enjoyed the story." Read more

"...It is a good story which mostly hangs together and is always interesting...." Read more

171 customers mention "Thought provoking"161 positive10 negative

Customers find the premise interesting and compelling. They describe the book as thought-provoking and troubling. The protagonists are complex and the story is set in an intriguing future America. It creates a deeper appreciation for slavery and its impact on history.

"...In this case, Ben Winters does a fantastic job building a world in which the Civil War never happened due to the assassination of Lincoln as..." Read more

"...the novel is an unqualified success because it provokes thought at an entry level proposition: If there was no Civil War in 1861, what then?..." Read more

"This story is set in a truly fascinating place--a twenty-first century America in which slavery survives in "the hard four" states of the..." Read more

"...put his Policeman trilogy down, and I truly enjoy his irreverent, street-smart, hard-on-the-outside, softer-on-the-inside protagonists...." Read more

94 customers mention "Writing quality"76 positive18 negative

Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book. They find it well-written, articulate, and captivating. The characters are described as complex and believable. The plot is tightly woven and brings home issues of race, class, morality, and authenticity.

"Underground Airlines is a powerful, well-written book doing what the best of its genre does: using the strange universe it creates to shed light on..." Read more

"...Underground Airlines is certainly well presented; well thought through, and throughly thought provoking...." Read more

"...It is vivid, detailed and all too believable. The story is told through its main character...." Read more

"...It's an important, uncomfortable work by a hugely talented author." Read more

16 customers mention "Visual quality"16 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's visual quality. They find it engaging and original, with vivid, detailed, and believable images. The tale is creative and distinct, set in a convincingly drawn 21st century America where slavery still exists.

"...It is vivid, detailed and all too believable. The story is told through its main character...." Read more

"...On display here is Winters' ability to create a fascinating look at an alternative history where slavery still exists and is permitted through a..." Read more

"...The prose is high school level, with perhaps 10 reasonably decent literary images...." Read more

"...Although written by a not so obvious author, this tale was so captivatingly original in it's sly twist on a theme among Black Folk in this country...." Read more

9 customers mention "Empathy"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book emotional and thought-provoking. They describe it as a thrill ride with mixed emotions like hope and despair.

"...main character immediately hooked me,as a reader,into the simultaneous Hope and despair, restrained rage and muted joys that he narrated from his..." Read more

"Excellent. Hard to put down. It is sad and depressing and at the same time uplifting...." Read more

"...But he did manage to make him not only believable but sympathetic. IMHO: very well done." Read more

"...This book is an emotional thrill ride!" Read more

115 customers mention "Plot twists"70 positive45 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the plot twists. Some find the book engaging with interesting twists and turns, a good thriller made better by the alternate reality setting. The characters keep growing throughout. However, others feel the story lacks consistency, has plot holes, and double-crosses. They also mention that the story is predictable and uninspiring.

"...All that being said, I thought the ending worked better on a character level than on a world or plot level – it closes out the arcs of our central..." Read more

"...; slips from a well-paced, believable story in the North to a chaotic, underexplained cascade of events when Victor travels to the South...." Read more

"...A few preliminary basics: well plotted and excellent prose. Thoroughly enjoyed the read...." Read more

"...genre conventions--including alternate history, science fictional extrapolation of technology, and some tropes from both detective stories and..." Read more

59 customers mention "Pacing"29 positive30 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it fast-paced and a quick read, while others feel the story is overly plotted, choppy, and the action takes some suspension of disbelief.

"...It’s also a solid, fast-paced detective story which is in addition to bringing in its themes in a way that seems organic also manages to be..." Read more

"...The pacing felt off because of all of Victor's internal conflict so if self-reflection and flashbacks aren't your thing to read, this book will not..." Read more

"...Yet the plot of "Underground Airlines" slips from a well-paced, believable story in the North to a chaotic, underexplained cascade of events..." Read more

"...or alternative history, but the execution combined with a slow moving plot that made little sense left me underwhelmed." Read more

46 customers mention "Character development"32 positive14 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the character development. Some find the characters compelling and relatable, with a relatable human hero. They appreciate the sharply drawn characters and the honest portrayal of how it would feel to be in bondage. However, others feel some characters are not developed enough, making it difficult to empathize with them even though terrible things happen to them.

"...But he may have undershot. The audacity and clarity of his vision, combined with fine writing, brought me to four stars, but my lack of increasing..." Read more

"...The story moves along at a good pace. You are interested in the characters. You see parts of the world revealed that are very interesting...." Read more

"...I liked both but found that each had challenges with the structure and character development that made it difficult for me to fully invest in the..." Read more

"...seen, a plot with plenty of twists and turns, and a memorable supporting cast of characters filled with morally gray people on both sides of the big..." Read more

Human Nature - the Devil and the Angel
5 out of 5 stars
Human Nature - the Devil and the Angel
It is 2015. Starting the story is Jim Dirkson, 40-ish, mild-mannered, and manumitted by his late owner's will. He is in Indianapolis desperately trying to find an abolitionist to help him free his wife, Gentle. She is still a PBL (Person Bound to Labor) in a bauxite mine in Carolina.I write that Dirkson starts the story because we find out shortly that Dirkson is an alias. He is working undercover for the U.S. Marshals, and he aims to catch runaway slaves, not save any.It's an alternate history. Abraham Lincoln was assassinated while still president-elect. In the horror following, Congress avoided a civil war by agreeing that 6 states could permanently keep slavery. The two Carolinas combine into one state for bigger clout. And in 1944, Truman offered Georgia defense contracts in exchange for abolishing slavery. So now there's 4 states with slavery. "The Hard Four" they are called.Imagine plantations with today's high-tech security abilities. Imagine slave catchers with today's tracking and forensic abilities. And imagine people as determined to undermine slavery as they did in 1860, willing to risk their lives and liberty to do so.I thought the re-imagining of America in "Underground Airlines" well thought-out and interesting. There is great writing, too. Here's, Dirkson, who is black, heading towards a slave state – the border is called "The Fence": "The Ramblers Roost was in Pulaski, Tennessee, fifty miles north of the Fence, but of course it got thicker the farther south you went, that coefficient of difficulty involved in doing even the simplest tasks. I think of it sometimes as a pressure in the atmosphere, like walking under water: the extra effort required to get served at a restaurant, make a purchase at a store. Check in to a motel."I first became acquainted with Ben H. Winters' writing, by reading his "The Last Policeman" trilogy,Last Policeman Trilogy (3 Book Series).I much enjoyed the trilogy for the same reason I enjoyed "Underground Airlines". In both, Winters does a very good job of showing how people react differently under stress. Better angels sometimes, and sometimes not.A recommended story, 4.6 stars rounded up to 5.Happy Reader
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2016
    Underground Airlines is a powerful, well-written book doing what the best of its genre does: using the strange universe it creates to shed light on the truth of our own. In this case, Ben Winters does a fantastic job building a world in which the Civil War never happened due to the assassination of Lincoln as president-elect and in which slavery still exists in America in 2016 in a way that highlights how the legacy of slavery still shapes and creates racial injustice and promotes structural racism in the United States as it really is. He draws sharp and pointed parallels between institutions in the America of the Hard Four and mass incarceration and the prison-industrial complex, a criminal justice system that too often criminalizes black bodies and the residential segregation of our cities. In doing so, he lays bare the moral compromises and consoling lies white people tell themselves to justify, ignore, soften or deny their personal complicity from a society that dehumanizes black people, and the toll that takes on those caught up in it and our society at large.

    It’s also a solid, fast-paced detective story which is in addition to bringing in its themes in a way that seems organic also manages to be surprising, well-founded and tie up almost all its loose ends in a neat bow.

    All that being said, I thought the ending worked better on a character level than on a world or plot level – it closes out the arcs of our central character Brother and his ally Martha well, but without letting you see the ripple effects of the story on their universe, and there are some noticeable holes in the later stages of the process of getting there. It’s also just hard to forget reading this book that this is a novel centered on a black voice talking about living under white supremacy and often pointing out the damage done by white liberals in centering themselves in the narrative of fighting white supremacy written by a white author. Ben Winters did a good job with Underground Airlines, but it does seem fair to ask whether this book was really his to write in the first place.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2016
    Bought this over a month ago after seeing reviews. Just finished it on vacation. My review is 4 of 5 stars, which I understand to be "very good". A few preliminary basics: well plotted and excellent prose. Thoroughly enjoyed the read. Most folks reading this already know this is alternative history, based on the premise that there was no Civil War in 1861 and that slavery survived as an institution to the present time, albeit in only 4 (really 5 since NC and SC have merged into "Carolina") states. I am a huge history buff, and really enjoy alternative history when well presented. Underground Airlines is certainly well presented; well thought through, and throughly thought provoking. That is really the point: to provoke intelligent thought and debate on "what might have been".
    This is a relatively short novel, and I suspect there will be a sequel(s). The author seems to reserve the opportunity to continue the narrative in the is alternative history world, which is certainly ok. But therein lies the criticism. Too much is wrapped summarily up at the end. Looking back on it, it might have been a more satisfying experience to read this after the follow ups are published.
    Finally, this is but one alternative history centered on the Civil War. Very thought provoking because of the truly original conceit; but still only one possible variation on that theme. In that sense the novel is an unqualified success because it provokes thought at an entry level proposition: If there was no Civil War in 1861, what then? A different Civil War in 1861? 1862? And what of the possible outcomes? And where might we be today?
    Well done. Thoroughly recommended.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2017
    I read "Underground Airlines" immediately after finishing "The Underground Railroad," due to a confluence of library availability/book club scheduling. I liked both but found that each had challenges with the structure and character development that made it difficult for me to fully invest in the story. "Underground Airlines" is set in a fictionalized present, with cassette tapes and cars and computers and chain stores. In this alternate history, Lincoln was assassinated shortly after his election, and a Congressional compromise permanently enshrines slavery in the South. By the time the novel begins, slavery is limited to the "Hard Four" states that refuse to give up their free labor. The rest of the United States and its corporations make a series of compromises to deny moral culpability while allowing slavery to continue.

    In "Underground Airlines," the protagonist, who goes by a shifting set of names from Jim to Victor to Brother, is an escaped slave who has been caught and is now trapped in a new form of servitude, forced by the U.S. government to track down other attempted runaways. He hates his work but feels he has no choice; if he tries to flee again, he will be returned to slavery or killed. As he is tracing the flight of a man to Indianapolis, he uncovers information through the "Underground Airlines" -- a network of allies helping slaves escape -- that could lead to his freedom. But his bosses at the U.S. Marshals Service also expect him to hand over the evidence.

    I admired how Winters portrayed the hypocrisy of the rest of the nation; most people would claim not to buy from companies that use slave labor, yet Atlanta allowed those corporations to use its highways to transport goods. It reminded me of the fact that most of us buy from retailers that benefit from exploitative prison labor to this day. I empathized with Victor's self-loathing for being forced to serve as an informant and badly wanted him to escape. Winters painfully describes the brutality and violence of slavery in ways that emphasize how many lives were destroyed by a cruel and unjust system -- one that was kept in place by millions of individual choices.

    Yet the plot of "Underground Airlines" slips from a well-paced, believable story in the North to a chaotic, underexplained cascade of events when Victor travels to the South. By the end of the novel, I found myself outside the tension of the story, disbelieving what had happened and wondering how the author would wrap up the loose ends. Some of the fantastical elements introduced in the final chapters undermined the overall cohesion of the book and distracted from the compelling psychological tension of its earlier scenes. I finished the book impressed by its ability to portray the lasting consequences of slavery and racism but unconvinced of its internal coherence.
    53 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2024
    This was our book club selection for the month and I very much enjoyed the story.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Ron Baxter
    5.0 out of 5 stars Well done
    Reviewed in Canada on August 23, 2017
    For an alternative history this one grabs you and runs you through the whole thing. I found the sadness of the protagonist framed the story and his fictional world, makes you compare it to our reality, which for some is not that dissimilar
  • Mig Bardsley
    4.0 out of 5 stars A very good read. Difficult to categorise.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 4, 2017
    Really well written, a really interesting premise and a splendid, genuine, tortured and sympathetic lead character. I really wanted him to get it right in the end. I gave it 4 stars because I wondered if this book couldn't have been just as good set in a current, rather than alternate history. I felt that the vividly described and scary existence of people living in a history where slavery hadn't been totally abolished in america somehow lost it's prophetic power when I remembered that it's not quite like that in our history. But it was very good, I'm just not quite sure how I would recommend it since it's very much about slavery and prejudice but not quite as we know it.
  • Sharon Harumi Lopez Koizumi
    4.0 out of 5 stars Une historie different et interesante
    Reviewed in France on July 18, 2017
    J'ai Aimé, c'etait une historie de fiction different. J'ai apprecié les personages et la creativite de l'auteur. Ça m'ai fait penser a la posibilite d'une realité parallele.
  • Michelle Birkette
    5.0 out of 5 stars A refreshing alternate history novel packed full of truth
    Reviewed in Australia on May 14, 2019
    It was suggested that I read an alternate history book in the Neil Gaiman’s MasterClass on writing, and I was drawn to this one as it was one of the only examples that wasn’t ‘what if Hitler won the war.’ I was drawn to the concept behind this novel. The ‘what if slavery was still legal in America’s south’ seemed like a pertinent kind of what-if.

    I don’t regret my choice. I loved this book.

    The reason such a reading exercise was recommended was because alternate history provides a particularly exaggerated way to see ‘truth in fiction’, and this book felt like it was jam-packed with hard hitting truths that are just as valid in this version of reality as they are in the version of reality in which slavery is still legal in the south. It’s too easy to believe.
  • Kindle Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Loved the Concept
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 18, 2018
    Started reading it without any particular idea of what the actual story was. Fairly well blown away once I realised the setting and the scenario presented. Decent story, well told but the whole idea is what got to me. Brilliant.