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His Promised Land: The Autobiography of John P. Parker, Former Slave and Conductor on the Underground Railroad

His Promised Land: The Autobiography of John P. Parker, Former Slave and Conductor on the Underground Railroad

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Author: John P. Parker
Creator: Stuart Seely Sprague
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Category: Book

List Price: $13.95
Buy New: $8.10
You Save: $5.85 (42%)



New (14) Used (21) from $6.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 135514

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 165
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.3 x 0.5

ISBN: 0393317188
Dewey Decimal Number: 975.004960730092
EAN: 9780393317183
ASIN: 0393317188

Publication Date: January 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New Book! Delivered direct from our US warehouse in 3-6 days (Expedited) or 10-14 days (Standard). Expedited shipping recommended for speedy delivery. Over 1 million satisfied customers.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - His Promised Land: The Autobiography of John P. Parker, Former Slave and Conductor on the Underground Railroad

Similar Items:

  • Passages to Freedom: The Underground Railroad in History and Memory
  • Fleeing for Freedom: Stories of the Underground Railroad as Told by Levi Coffin and William Still
  • Beyond the River: A True Story of the Underground Railroad
  • Follow the River
  • The Underground Railroad: Authentic Narratives and First-Hand Accounts

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
John Parker was born a slave in Virginia but managed to buy his freedom. He hated the injustice of slavery, and so for about 20 years before the Civil War devoted his life to the dangerous work of helping other blacks escape to freedom. This is one of only a few accounts of a black American's fight against slavery in his own words. Unpublished for nearly a century, it brings to life the American frontier of the mid-18th century in as thrilling a fashion as any John Ford film or historical novel.

Book Description
John P. Parker is one of the few African Americans whose battle against slavery we can now turn to in his own words. He recounts dramatically how he helped fugitive slaves to cross the Ohio River from Kentucky and go north to freedom. He risked his life--hiding in coffins, diving off a steamboat with bounty hunters on his trail--and his freedom to fight for the freedom of his people.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Excellent for Children   September 18, 2007
My daughter needed this book for research of slavery. It was great for her and she learned alot!


5 out of 5 stars An Outstanding Book   January 19, 2005
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I ordered this book after seeing an interesting reference to it in an article in Smithsonian Magazine. I am so very glad I did.It is an amazing book, a very rare combination of thought provoking historical narrative, and Indiana Jones-ish excitement. I only wish it had been ten times as long-I would have devoured it. If I hadn't read the preface, which gives the background, I would have thought it was fiction, and pretty darn nail biting fiction at that.
I have given quite a bit of thought to this book, wondering what I would have done, given the same situation, and concluded that you can only hope you would be strong enough to rise to the circumstances, but fear is a powerful deterrent.I am giving my copy to the history department chair at my daughters' high school, and will ask them to consider making it a part of the curriculum.



5 out of 5 stars WOW!!!   September 10, 2002
 12 out of 13 found this review helpful

I brought this book some time ago and just got around to reading it. Well, let me tell you that I can kick myself for not reading it sooner. You will get through this book so fast your head would spin because it is so interesting you will not want to put it down. John P. Parker, my hero.


4 out of 5 stars Engrossing account of the Underground Railroad   June 17, 1998
 19 out of 19 found this review helpful

John Parker's autobiography is an engrossing and often surprising account of the activities of the Underground Railroad. Parker was born and lived as a slave until buying his freedom and moving to Ripley, Ohio. There he joined forces with Rev. John Rankin in helping slaves cross the Ohio River and escape to Canada. His account is lucid, swift-moving, rambunctious, and highly literate. He describes the Ohio River Valley as "the Borderland," comparing it to the lawless, violent Scots/English border. The border, constantly raided by Abolitionists helping steal men, women, and children out of slavery and patrolled by slave-owning vigilantes intent on catching them, simmers in as treacherous a state of unrest and violence as any "Wild West" town at its worst. Parker never walks the streets of Ripley without a pistol, knife, and black jack in his belt. He never admits to working for the Underground Railroad, especially after passage of the Fugitive Slave Law in 1850, but pretty much everyone in the region knows that he does, putting his life in constant danger.

Parker's account abounds in hair-breadth escapes, heart-rending failures, and startling heroics. He also reveals aspects of the Underground Railroad that one never suspects but which seem inevitable after he describes them, such as the competition that developed between John Rankin's Ripley, Ohio branch of the Railroad and Levi Coffin's Cincinnati group. Parker insists that Coffin was merely the better publicist, not the better rescuer of the two. It's also clear that for Parker rescuing slaves was not merely a fierce moral imperative but also an activity touched with excitement, zest--even, strange as this sounds, fun. There is an element of sport to his activities, despite their grim, life and death seriousness. Parker is obviously bold, intelligent, crafty--good at what he does--and he relishes the hard-won triumphs of courage and guile that allow him to free his fellow slaves.

It's hard to say what place &qu! ot;His Promised Land" will take in American literature. It will not, I don't think, replace Frederick Douglass's "Narrative of an American Slave" as the country's premier account of the experience of slavery. It's not as powerful, relentless, or literarily self-conscious an account as Douglass's great work. But it may prove to be, for the Underground Railroad, what Sam Watkins's "Co. Aytch" is for the Civil War: perhaps the most engaging, colorful, and moving account by an 'ordinary extraordinary' man in one of this country's most agonizing and dramatic conflicts.


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