β€˜I am painting a historical landscape,” writes Carrie Gibson – β€œone that stretches the entire length and breadth of the Americas.” The story she applies this panoramic approach to is that of β€œthe largest, longest-running and most diverse ongoing insurrection the world has ever known”: the fight for freedom by enslaved Africans and their descendants in the Americas, from the 1500s to the 1800s.

It is an ambitious project. In 1979, the historian Eugene Genovese remarked that this story β€œmight require 10 large volumes to tell in adequate detail”. Gibson attempts it in 500 pages. Flitting from Baltimore to Bridgetown to Bahia, her 35 chapters are a catalogue of escapes, armed uprisings and revolution – a dense tapestry as rich in stories from Spanish Cuba, Portuguese Brazil, French Martinique or Dutch CuraΓ§ao as from the more familiar settings of the United States or the Anglophone Caribbean.

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