
Reach for this book when your child starts asking questions about the complexities of fairness and why people in history made difficult choices that do not fit into a simple hero versus villain narrative. It is an essential resource for parents navigating conversations about the American Revolution beyond the standard textbook version, focusing on the agency and resilience of enslaved individuals who had to decide which side of the war truly offered the best path to freedom. Through historical accounts and vibrant illustrations, the book explores themes of hope, calculated risk, and the agonizing pursuit of justice. It is developmentally appropriate for middle-grade readers, providing a realistic yet age-accessible look at the harsh realities of slavery and the strategic bravery required to escape it. Parents will appreciate how it treats children as capable of understanding that 'freedom' meant something very different for a Black person than it did for a white Patriot in 1776.
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Sign in to write a reviewDescriptions of escapes, war skirmishes, and the dangers of being recaptured.
Explores how neither side of the war was fully 'good' regarding the rights of Black people.
The struggle for a home and the separation of families during the war.
The book addresses slavery, systemic racism, and the betrayal of promises by both the British and Americans. The approach is direct and secular. While the individual stories of survival are hopeful, the overall historical resolution is realistic and bittersweet, acknowledging that freedom was often met with further hardship.
A 10-year-old history buff who feels frustrated by one-sided school lessons and wants to understand the 'why' behind people's choices during times of crisis.
Parents should be prepared to discuss the fact that the 'Founding Fathers' were often enslavers, which can be a jarring realization for children raised on patriotic myths. No specific scene needs censoring, but the concept of being a 'refugee' at the end of the book requires some context. A child asking, 'Why would the slaves fight for the British King if the Americans were fighting for liberty?'
Younger readers (age 9) will focus on the 'escape' and adventure elements. Older readers (12+) will grasp the moral ambiguity of the British using freedom as a tactical weapon rather than a moral imperative.
Unlike many Revolutionary War books that focus on Black Patriots like Crispus Attucks, this uniquely centers on Black Loyalists, offering a rare perspective on the strategic choices of the marginalized.
The book provides a historical overview of the approximately 20,000 African Americans who joined the British forces during the American Revolution. It details Lord Dunmore's Proclamation, the formation of the Ethiopian Regiment, and the difficult post-war lives of these Black Loyalists in Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.