The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

Born a slave, survived a free bondswoman, reborn an outspoken abolitionist, Sojourner Truth died a heroine of graceful proportions. But the story of her inner struggles is as powerful and provocative as her accomplishments and could be captured only in fiction. This emotionally searing novel beautifully infuses the historical atrocities of the 1800s with psychological speculation of who Sojourner Truth really was, beyond her social and political persona. Reminiscent of White Oleander, Bastard Out of Carolina, and Their Eyes Were Watching God, Jacqueline Sheehan's book tells the story of Sojourner Truth as it has never been told before.

"I rode to earth on the backside of a comet." So begins the story, based largely on the early life of Sojourner Truth. Born at the turn of the nineteenth century to slaves of a New York State Dutch farmer, given the name Isabella, the young child is sold off at the age of nine to a succession of owners---some cruel, some indifferent, all assuming that she, as a colored girl, is nothing more than property. But Isabella has dreams and fears and deeply felt faith that somehow see her through the indignities and beatings she must tolerate. Ultimately she triumphs against the most enormous of odds to speak out against slavery and for women's rights as long as she draws breath.

A Comet's Tale is a testament on one woman's strength and a powerful lesson in courage.

PRAISE FOR A COMET'S TALE:

"…Sheehan's writing is lively and vivid and her feel for historical detail is fine…"
-The New York Times

"…an emotionally and lyrically powerful novelization of the life of Sojourner Truth…offering a new way of looking at one of history's greatest champions of freedom."
-Publisher's Weekly

"…Sheehan offers a solid portrait of slavery that also brings the child and young woman to life."
-Kirkus Reviews

1111812605
The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

Born a slave, survived a free bondswoman, reborn an outspoken abolitionist, Sojourner Truth died a heroine of graceful proportions. But the story of her inner struggles is as powerful and provocative as her accomplishments and could be captured only in fiction. This emotionally searing novel beautifully infuses the historical atrocities of the 1800s with psychological speculation of who Sojourner Truth really was, beyond her social and political persona. Reminiscent of White Oleander, Bastard Out of Carolina, and Their Eyes Were Watching God, Jacqueline Sheehan's book tells the story of Sojourner Truth as it has never been told before.

"I rode to earth on the backside of a comet." So begins the story, based largely on the early life of Sojourner Truth. Born at the turn of the nineteenth century to slaves of a New York State Dutch farmer, given the name Isabella, the young child is sold off at the age of nine to a succession of owners---some cruel, some indifferent, all assuming that she, as a colored girl, is nothing more than property. But Isabella has dreams and fears and deeply felt faith that somehow see her through the indignities and beatings she must tolerate. Ultimately she triumphs against the most enormous of odds to speak out against slavery and for women's rights as long as she draws breath.

A Comet's Tale is a testament on one woman's strength and a powerful lesson in courage.

PRAISE FOR A COMET'S TALE:

"…Sheehan's writing is lively and vivid and her feel for historical detail is fine…"
-The New York Times

"…an emotionally and lyrically powerful novelization of the life of Sojourner Truth…offering a new way of looking at one of history's greatest champions of freedom."
-Publisher's Weekly

"…Sheehan offers a solid portrait of slavery that also brings the child and young woman to life."
-Kirkus Reviews

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The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

by Jacqueline Sheehan
The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

The Comet's Tale: A Novel About Sojourner Truth

by Jacqueline Sheehan

eBook

$5.99 

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Overview

Born a slave, survived a free bondswoman, reborn an outspoken abolitionist, Sojourner Truth died a heroine of graceful proportions. But the story of her inner struggles is as powerful and provocative as her accomplishments and could be captured only in fiction. This emotionally searing novel beautifully infuses the historical atrocities of the 1800s with psychological speculation of who Sojourner Truth really was, beyond her social and political persona. Reminiscent of White Oleander, Bastard Out of Carolina, and Their Eyes Were Watching God, Jacqueline Sheehan's book tells the story of Sojourner Truth as it has never been told before.

"I rode to earth on the backside of a comet." So begins the story, based largely on the early life of Sojourner Truth. Born at the turn of the nineteenth century to slaves of a New York State Dutch farmer, given the name Isabella, the young child is sold off at the age of nine to a succession of owners---some cruel, some indifferent, all assuming that she, as a colored girl, is nothing more than property. But Isabella has dreams and fears and deeply felt faith that somehow see her through the indignities and beatings she must tolerate. Ultimately she triumphs against the most enormous of odds to speak out against slavery and for women's rights as long as she draws breath.

A Comet's Tale is a testament on one woman's strength and a powerful lesson in courage.

PRAISE FOR A COMET'S TALE:

"…Sheehan's writing is lively and vivid and her feel for historical detail is fine…"
-The New York Times

"…an emotionally and lyrically powerful novelization of the life of Sojourner Truth…offering a new way of looking at one of history's greatest champions of freedom."
-Publisher's Weekly

"…Sheehan offers a solid portrait of slavery that also brings the child and young woman to life."
-Kirkus Reviews


Product Details

BN ID: 2940011410727
Publisher: Greenforge Books
Publication date: 07/17/2011
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 402 KB

About the Author

About The Author

Jacqueline Sheehan, Ph.D., is a fiction writer and essayist. She is also a practicing psychologist. She is a New Englander through and through, but spent twenty years living in the western states of Oregon, California, and New Mexico doing a variety of things, including house painting, freelance photography, newspaper writing, clerking in a health food store, and directing a traveling troupe of high school puppeteers.

Her first novel, Truth, was published in 2003 by Free Press of Simon and Schuster. Her second novel, Lost & Found, was published 2007 by Avon, Harper Collins. Lost & Found has been on the New York Times Bestseller List and has been optioned for film by Katherine Heigl, star of Grey's Anatomy. Her third novel, Now & Then, was published in July 2009 by Avon, Harper Collins. She has published travel articles (Winter in Soviet Georgia), short stories (most recently in the Berkshire Review), and numerous essays and radio pieces. In 2005, she was the editor of the anthology Women Writing in Prison. This anthology is the culmination of eight years of writing workshops sponsored by Voices from Inside, an advocacy group for incarcerated women.

Jacqueline teaches workshops at Grub Street in Boston and Writers in Progress in Florence, Massachusetts.

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