Touched With Fire: Based on the True Story of Ellen Craft.
Christopher Datta. CreateSpace
Publishing. June 2015. 398 pp. ISBN#:
9781490498836.
Ellie
is a white woman of African-American and white descent. But all that matters in her Georgia home is
that she remember her place as a slave.
Her white father never admits her forced himself on her mother and never
feels he has any duty to acknowledge his daughter, let alone treat her decently
as any father should. She
is constantly threatened by the leering looks of her half-sister’s husband, a
minister and more men without any morals.
This
is the world of Southern slavery. One
may decry the dozens of conversations Ellie is forced to listen to while
serving dinner or some other visitor, dialogue that is repetitive with the
notion of keeping slaves in their place and either beating them violently or
selling them if they get out of line. What is so despicable to read was the
accepted way of life in the pre-Civil War lives of the South. Revisionist history has no place in this
story that is actually based on a real slave.
This is the story of Ellie and Will, William Craft, Ellie’s husband.
Ellie
and Will dared to do what few slaves would ever do and I can’t recall ever
reading a story like this one. For Ellie
with her very white appearance disguises herself as a man, the owner of Will,
and their goal is to find freedom in Philadelphia. To tell more would ruin an amazingly bold and
courageous story!
Suffice
to say that they travel but soon realize they cannot make it for a legal reason
they had not anticipated. So when war
breaks out between the North and South, Will must return to the South and Ellie
joins the Union Army, determined to fight her way back to Will and hopefully to
freedom for both of them.
Christopher
Datta crafts a fine story in which Ellie shows not only grit and perseverance
but also reveals her terrible fears. Her
skill and her insistence of thinking like a man defy our expectations and
enable her to survive so many tension-ridden challenges that one can’t stop
turning the pages to find out what happens next. The love she and Will share is
lovely to read, a love in which both treat each other respectfully and
passionately as equals. This is fine, fine historical fiction and is highly
recommended for all ages. It would make
one amazing movie as well!
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