Reviews
Review by: Dan Lazare, The Nation - February 1, 2006
"A remarkable effort to present the slave trade from a perspective very different from what we are used to, not that of slavery's liberal opponents or even of the slaves themselves but of the Africans from whose midst the slaves were taken . . . Bailey is scrupulously objective in making her way through the resulting political minefield . . . People like Anne Bailey make us uncomfortable, which is all to the good. "
Review by: Ato Quayson, Director, African Studies Centre, University of Cambridge, - February 1, 2006
"A true work of retrieval and restoration . . . A remarkable gift."
Review: Publishers Weekly - February 1, 2006
"Bailey offers a noteworthy, carefully researched contribution to the study of the African slave trade . . . [and] brings unheard historical voices to the fore."
Review by: Robert Byrd, Atlanta Journal Constitution - December 1, 2005
"Bailey is not afraid to ask difficult questions . . . [She] expands and troubles our understanding of the African diaspora. In this fine and accessible study of the slave trade, Bailey places African voices of this era at the center of the writing of history."
Review: Kirkus Reviews - December 1, 2005
"[Bailey's] research is important, her questions provocative, and her arguments sensible."
Review: Publishers Weekly - December 1, 2005
"Bailey offers a noteworthy, carefully researched contribution to the study of the African slave trade . . . [and] brings unheard historical voices to the fore."
Review by: Richard Rathbone - December 1, 2005
"Anne Bailey's judicious, beautifully written account of this extended, appalling human experience is enormously enhanced by her great original contribution-the frequently moving and always thought-provoking memories and understandings of that tragedy amongst the descendants of those who participated as victims and perpetrators in West Africa itself."