Reviews  
 
 
  WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING: Praise for Bound for Canaan | EXCERPTS: From The Intro
REVIEWS: W. S. Journal | Publisher’s Weekly | George Nagle | New Yorker | American Heritage
Civil War History

   
 

Review: Publishers Weekly

THOUGH THE Underground Railroad is one of the touchstones of American collective memory, there’s been no comprehensive, accessible history of the secret movement that delivered more than 100,000 runaway slaves to freedom in the Northern states and Canada. Journalist Bordewich (Killing the White Man’s Indian) fills this gap with a clear, utterly compelling survey of the Railroad from its earliest days in Revolution-era America through the Civil War and the extension of the vote to African Americans in 1870. Using an impressive array of archival and contemporary sources (letters, autobiographies, tax records and slave narratives, as well as new scholarship), Bordewich reveals the Railroad to be much more complicated—and much more remarkable—than is usually understood. As a progressive movement that integrated people across races and was underwritten by secular political theories but carried out by fervently religious citizens in the midst of a national spiritual awakening, the clandestine network was among the most fascinatingly diverse groups ever to unite behind a common American cause. What makes Bordewich’s work transcend the confines of detached social history is his emphasis on the real lives and stories of the Railroad’s participants. Religious extremists, left-wing radicals and virulent racists all emerge as fully realized characters, flawed but determined people doing what they believed was right, and every chapter has at least one moment—a detail, a vignette, a description—that will transport readers to the world Bordewich describes. The men and women of this remarkable account will remain with readers for a long time to come.




 
 
  Underground Railroad TimelineReviews and ExcerptsContact the Author  
 

Other BooksAbout the Author News and Events UR Blogorder online