Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Original Sins: A Novel of Slavery & Freedom
Original Sins: A Novel of Slavery & Freedom | Peg Kingman
2 posts | 1 read | 3 to read
Why would a runaway Virginia slavehaving built a rewarding life in the East Indies as a silk merchantrisk everything by returning to America in 1840, eighteen years after taking her freedom? Anibaddh Lyngdoh claims that she intends to introduce a new kind of silk to the floundering American silk industry. But her true reason, as her old friend Grace MacDonald Pollocke discovers, is far more personal. Grace, now a Philadelphia portrait painter, undertakes a perilous investigation that leads to the discovery of old sins and crimes, and the commission of new ones. What laws may be brokenwhat sins and crimes committedin the service of a higher justice? Deceit, forgery, fraud, perjury . . . even murder? This novel thrillingly evokes a nineteenth-century America not so different from the present: a time of stunning new technologies and financial collapse, when religious and racial views collided with avowed principles of morality and law.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
BellaBookNook
post image

Yay! Two books I received today for my birthday and more coming in the mail. I never heard of Original Sins but it sounds interesting. I love Miss Fisher Mysteries the TV series so I look forward to the books. ❤️#birthdaybooks

review
Donna_sBookMinute
post image
Pickpick

Venture into the areas of photography, the silk trade, slavery, music, and religion as painter Grace Pollocke gives a glimpse into the life of one of her sitters. Anibaddh Lyngdoh, is a slave who accompanies her master to Scotland then declares her freedom under the refuge of Scottish law.

BellaBookNook I've never heard of this book. Peaking my interest for sure. I read, "At Her Majesty's Request" by Walter Dean Myers this year and really enjoyed it. 9y
Donna_sBookMinute @BellaBookNook I think you would enjoy reading it. There are two parts that readily come to mind even though I read it several years. Always knew I would reread it. I'll check out "At Her Majesty's Request." 9y
3 likes2 stack adds2 comments