June 20, 2012 The war is over, Lincoln has been assassinated, all slaves are officially free, and the South is in turmoil: with so many hopes and expectations, so many frustrations and resentments, this is fertile ground in which to plant a novel. In Freeman, Leonard Pitts Jr. makes the most of this setting’s potential for conflict. The book’s main characters include Sam Freeman, a self-educated former slave who escaped to the North fifteen years earlier and is now determined to go back and find his wife; and Prudence Cafferty Kent, a privileged young war widow from Boston with a plan to educate former slaves in the South.
Read moreThe Social Strains of Freedom
Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Leonard Pitts Jr. plunges into the South of 1865