Uncle Tom's Cabin

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Joe Books Ltd, Nov 24, 2015 - Fiction - 384 pages

The lives and losses of slaves in the American south are portrayed in Harriet Beecher Stowe's unflinching indictment of slavery.

When a benevolent landowner decides to sell two slaves—Uncle Tom and Eliza—in order to raise funds, the lives of the two slaves follow divergent paths. While Eliza escapes to eventual freedom, Uncle Tom is repeatedly sold until he ends up working on the prosperous Legree plantation, where his very life becomes forfeit to his violent master.

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Contents

Chapter XXXIIICassy
Chapter XXXIVThe Quadroons Story
Chapter XXXVThe Tokens
Chapter XXXVIEmmeline and Cassy
Chapter XXXVIILiberty
Chapter XXXVIIIThe Victory
Chapter XXXIXThe Stratagem
Chapter XLThe Martyr
Chapter XLIThe Young Master
Chapter XLIIAn Authentic Ghost Story
Chapter XLIIIResults
Chapter XLIVThe Liberator
Chapter XLVConcluding Remarks
About the Author Copyright
Copyright

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About the author (2015)

Harriet Beecher Stowe was an American author and abolitionist. Born in Litchfield, Connecticut, she was raised in a deeply religious family and educated in a seminary school run by her elder sister. In her adult life, Stowe married biblical scholar and abolitionist Calvin Ellis Stowe, who would later go on to work as Harriet's literary agent, and the two participated in the Underground Railroad by providing temporary refuge for escaped slaves travelling to the American North. Shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War, Stowe published her most famous work, Uncle Tom's Cabin, a stark and sympathetic depiction of the desperate lives of African American slaves. The book went on to see unprecedented sales, and informed American and European attitudes towards abolition. In the years leading up to her death, suffering from dementia or Alzheimer's disease, Stowe is said to have begun re-writing Uncle Tom's Cabin, almost word-for-word, believing that she was writing the original manuscript once again. Stowe died in July 1, 1896 at the age of eighty-five.

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