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Passengers
Passengers
Oct 11, 2024 7:19 AM

Author:William Still,Ta-Nehisi Coates,Sullivan Jones,Heather Alicia Simms,Bahni Turpin,J. D. Jackson,Kevin R. Free

Passengers

Brought to you by Penguin.

WITH AN INTRODUCTION FROM TA-NEHISI COATES, AUTHOR OF THE WATER DANCER

A riveting collection of the hardships, hairbreadth escapes, and mortal struggles of enslaved people seeking freedom: These are the true stories of the Underground Railroad.

A secret network of safe houses, committees and guides that stretched well below the Mason-Dixon Line into the brutal slave states of the American South, the Underground Railroad remains one of the most impressive and well-organised resistance movements in modern history. It facilitated the escape of over 30,000 slave 'passengers' through America and into Canada during its peak years of 1850-60, and, in total, an estimated 100,000 slaves found their freedom through the network.

Abridged from William Still's The Underground Railroad Records - an epic historical document that chronicles the first-hand stories of American slaves who escaped to freedom via the Underground Railroad - Passengers tells of the secret methods, risks and covert sacrifices that were made to liberate so many from slavery. From tales of men murdered in cold blood for their part in helping assist runaways and terrifyingly tense descriptions of stowaways and dramatic escape plans, to stories of families reunited and the moments of absurdity that the Underground Railroad forced its 'passengers' to sometimes endure, Still's narratives testify to the humanity of this vast enterprise.

ABRIDGED FROM WILLIAM STILL'S THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD RECORDS

© William Still 2020 (P) Penguin Audio 2020

Reviews

When we look back at the 20th century, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn will be remembered not just as an influential author, but as one of the few authors who actually altered the way in which millions of people thought about politics... Solzhenitsyn stood out, even among an exceptional generation of Russian dissidents and writers, for his extraordinary commitment to truth-telling

—— Anne Applebaum

The most poignant, the strongest of all Patrick Modiano’s works. From a small ad found in a Paris newspaper in 1941, the writer embarks on the hunt for a young Jewish girl Dora Bruder, a runaway who has disappeared into the dark night of the Occupation. Through this investigation, Modiano looks for Dora, but for his own father as well, also hiding in the Paris of that time. Absolutely magnificent.

—— Le Monde

An exceptional book

—— JORGE SEMPRUN

This book is both harrowing and admirable...quite simply shattering

—— RENAUD MATIGNON, Figaro

Nothing less than a history of humanity written from the perspective of the sea

—— Jerry Brotton , Financial Times

He tells, in broad strokes and pin-sharp detail, the story of how humanity has crossed the oceans to explore, trade and fight ... A big book, full of surprises. I can open it at any page and be engrossed in his incredible scholarship and vivid narrative.

—— Hugh Johnson , Daily Mail

Lovell takes us on an exhilarating journey, tracing the spread of Maoist theories across South-east Asia and then Africa, ending up in today’s China… The historical sweep of this book is impressive

—— Christopher Coker , Literary Review

Lovell has produced a work which may well be the most harrowing, fascinating and occasionally hilarious book on the subject thus far

—— Stuart Kelly , Scotland on Sunday

Lovell is an accomplished storyteller with a nuanced and sophisticated understanding of China’s relationship with itself and the world

—— Isabel Hilton , Prospect

Lovell has a gift for compressing long and convoluted histories via just the right stories, characters, moments, and statistics… In vivid, often grim detail, Lovell shows us how and why Maoism has proven better, both inside and outside China, at attacking state infrastructure than building it up

—— Christopher Harding , Daily Telegraph

Lovell breaks new ground and does so in a wonderfully well-written account packed with horrors, extraordinary characters and occasionally macabre humour

—— Chris Patten , Tablet

Lovells’s descriptions of…global strands of Maoism are well-researched and colourful

—— Economist

Highly readable and well-researched book… timely

—— David Priestland , New Statesman

A fascinating account of the influence of Maoism, during the cold war and beyond

—— Gideon Rachman , Financial Times, *Books of the Year*

[A] superb and chilling study

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times, *Books of the Year*

A fascinating and timely work on one of the most influential and disruptive strands of Marxist thought: that of Mao Zedong… the book reveals the relevance of Mao to our current populist age

—— London Review of Economics, *Books of the Year*

Matthews is an excellent storyteller . . . Black Sun is the kind of thriller you want to savour as you turn the pages, suspenseful and thought provoking.

—— NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS

[Frederick Forsyth's] endorsement of fellow journalist Matthews’ totally immersive debut for its “fearsome authenticity” raises the reader’s expectations, and Matthews delivers. To call the novel chilling is an understatement . . . Forsyth claims his wife told him to quit writing because he was too old to travel to dangerous places. Fortunately, there are brilliant new, informed tellers of tales following in his wake.

—— BOOKLIST Starred Review

An impressive debut and it’s not a stretch to say that Matthews’ whole life led him to this book . . . [he] knows the landscape and the people, and his recreation of Cold War-era Russia and the inner workings of Soviet government and society are so good they seem effortless . . . deeply researched and filled with small details and brief scenes that give the setting a cold, clear life . . . the characters are also sharply drawn. A thriller like this lives or dies by its protagonist and Vasin is a breath of fresh air.

—— CRIMINAL ELEMENT

A page-turning police procedural . . . . Far beyond a murder mystery, the novel is a textured examination of truth, assumption, and deception. Rich street scenes and dialogue embed in the reader’s mind undercurrents of the paranoia of living in a totalitarian state where neighbour betrays neighbour, colleague denounces colleague, and police gather information to manipulate underlings and bury the secrets of political leaders.

—— HISTORICAL NOVELS REVIEW

Matthews is especially adept at limning the bureaucratic infighting and political double-dealing that permeate Soviet society . . . the depiction of the forces and behaviours animating Soviet life are compelling . . . well-constructed characters, and the persistence of history is a powerful tidal presence . . . this thriller provides many pleasures.

—— KIRKUS REVIEWS

Magical . . . don’t miss it.

—— FORBES magazine

A terrific thriller, knowledgeably written, intricately plotted and the more chilling for being based on a true story.

—— CHOICE magazine 'Book of the Month’
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