Categories: Trending now

Book excerpt: “Night Flyer,” the life of abolitionist Harriet Tubman

2024-07-14 22:35:02

Penguin


We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.

National Book Award-winning author Tiya Miles explores the history and mythology of a remarkable woman in “Night Flyer: Harriet Tubman and the Faith Dreams of a Free People” (Penguin).

Read an excerpt below. 


“Night Flyer” by Tiya Miles

Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.


Delivery is an art form. Harriet must have recognized this as she delivered time and again on her promise to free the people. Plying the woods and byways, she pretended to be someone she was not when she encountered enslavers or hired henchmen—an owner of chickens, or a reader, or an elderly woman with a curved spine, or a servile sort who agreed that her life should be lived in captivity. Each interaction in which Harriet convinced an enemy that she was who they believed her to be—a Black person properly stuck in their place—she was acting. Performance—gauging what an audience might want and how she might deliver it—became key to Harriet Tubman’s tool kit in the late 1850s and early 1860s. In this period, when she had not only to mislead slave catchers but also to convince enslaved people to trust her with their lives, and antislavery donors to trust her with their funds, Tubman polished her skills as an actor and a storyteller. Many of the accounts that we now have of Tubman’s most eventful moments were told by Tubman to eager listeners who wrote things down with greater or lesser accuracy. In telling these listeners certain things in particular ways, Tubman always had an agenda, or more accurately, multiple agendas that were at times in competition. She wanted to inspire hearers to donate cash or goods to the cause. She wanted to buck up the courage of fellow freedom fighters. She wanted to convey her belief that God was the engine behind her actions. And in her older age, in the late 1860s through the 1880s, she wanted to raise money to purchase and secure a haven for those in need.

There also must have been creative and egoistic desires mixed in with Harriet’s motives. She wanted to be the one to tell her own story. She wanted recognition for her accomplishments even as she attributed them to God. She wanted to control the narrative that was already in formation about her life by the end of the 1850s. And she wanted to be a free agent in word as well as deed.

      
From “Night Flyer: Harriet Tubman and the Faith Dreams of a Free People” by Tiya Miles. Reprinted by arrangement with Penguin Press, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. Copyright © 2024 by Tiya Miles. 


Get the book here:

“Night Flyer” by Tiya Miles

Buy locally from Bookshop.org


For more info:

News Today

Share
Published by
News Today

Recent Posts

Early red card hampers Barcelona in Champions League loss to Monaco

2024-09-20 09:15:03 MONACO (AP) — Barcelona’s perfect start to the season ended with a 2-1…

3 mins ago

Jets lead Patriots in fourth quarter

2024-09-20 09:05:02 The New York Jets host the New England Patriots in a matchup of…

13 mins ago

NY Jets vs New England Patriots postgame updates: Final score, analysis

2024-09-20 08:55:02 EAST RUTHERFORD − From start to finish, the Jets had this game under…

23 mins ago

Watch: Sofia Vergara Eating Hamburger At Emmys 2024 Is The Coolest Thing On Internet Today

If you love a good burger, looks like you have something in common with Sofia…

38 mins ago

Why Adrian Wojnarowski left a $7 million-a-year job at ESPN

2024-09-20 08:35:03 Accepting a position as general manager of a Division I basketball team doesn't…

43 mins ago

Intel Said to Have Lost Sony’s PlayStation 6 Chip Contract to AMD

Intel lost out on a contract to design and fabricate Sony's PlayStation 6 chip in…

48 mins ago