Slaves in the Family
NATIONAL BESTSELLER
“[A] LANDMARK BOOK.”
–San Francisco Chronicle
“POWERFUL.”
–The New York Times Book Review
“GRIPPING.”
–The Boston Sunday Globe
“BRILLIANT.”
–The New Yorker
“EVERYONE SHOULD READ AND LEARN FROM THIS LUMINOUS BOOK…Like Alex Haley’s Roots, through which African American history came into national focus…Slaves in the Family has the potential for creating a perceptual shift in the American mind…The book is not only honest in its scrupulous reporting but also personal narrative at its finest.”
–San Francisco Chronicle
“BALL IS A FIRST-RATE SCHOLAR-JOURNALIST…He’s also a good detective, tracking down the many descendants of Ball slaves from New York to California and back in the South and coaxing them, often with some difficulty, to tell their stories…Outside Faulkner, it will be hard to find a more poignant, powerful account of a white man struggling with his and his nation’s past.”
–The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“A MASTERPIECE…REMARKABLE…It is a work about slaves in the family. But it is also a large omnium gatherum of enchanting fireside anecdotes, secrets teased out of reluctant fragments from the remote past, the real lives of blacks and whites whose stories had been lost in the disintegrating churn of time until Edward Ball’s patient reconstructions.”
–The Raleigh News & Observer
“A TOUR DE FORCE…The heart of this remarkable book consists of his sleuthing–tracking down and interviewing the descendants of former Ball slaves across the country… Part oral history, this unique family saga is a catharsis and a searching inventory of racially divided American society.”
–Publishers Weekly (starred and boxed review)
“A PAGEANTRY OF PASSIONS AND STRUGGLES.”
–African Sun TimesWriter Edward Ball opens Slaves in the Family with an anecdote: “My father had a little joke that made light of our legacy as a family that had once owned slaves. ‘There are five things we don’t talk about in the Ball family,’ he would say. ‘Religion, sex, death, money and the Negroes.’” Ball himself seemed happy enough to avoid these touchy issues until an invitation to a family reunion in South Carolina piqued his interest in his family’s extensive plantation and slave-holding past. He realized that he had a very clear idea of who his white ancestors were–their names, who their children and children’s children were, even portraits and photographs–but he had only a murky vision of the black people who supported their livelihood and were such an intimate part of their daily lives; he knew neither their names nor what happened to them and their descendents after they were freed following the Civil War. So he embarked on a journey to uncover the history of the Balls and the black families with whom their lives were inextricably intertwined, as well as the less tangible resonance of slavery in both sets of families. From plantation records, interviews with descendents of both the Balls and their slaves, and travels to Africa and the American South, Ball has constructed a story of the riches and squalor, violence and insurrection–the pride and shame–that make up the history and legacy of slavery in America.
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(out of 105 reviews)
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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
Review by Sheryl Katz for Slaves in the Family
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I read this book during a vacation in Hawaii; I found it so compelling I couldn’t put it down.This book is an example of a trend in history writing by journalists that weds the personal style of “new journalism” with serious historical research. The book is both a “personal” account of the Ball family ownership of slaves and a well-researched and thoughtful history of slavery in the United States. Some readers have commented that the book was difficult to read; I thought the writing was elegant and easy to follow – much easier to digest than academic writing. Some readers have felt the book was superficial or self-indulgent on the part of the writer. I didn’t find it to be either – the winding of the story made sense and like a good plot led naturally from one part to the next. The research underneath the story was thorough, and the analysis was thoughtful.
Review by Cynthia K. Robertson for Slaves in the Family
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National Book Award-winner, Slaves in the Family, is one of the best nonfiction books I have read in the past ten years. Edward Ball comes from a very prominent family of plantation owners in the Charleston Low Country. The patriarch, Elias Ball, immigrates to the colonies in the late 1600’s. Being very prolific when it came to progeny, he soon had children and grandchildren owning over two dozen plantations along the Ashley and Cooper Rivers. After the Civil War, the Ball plantations were sold or lost, one by one. Yet today, the Balls are still very prominent in Charleston Society. Their family tree is well documented, and instead of being plantation owners, they now count lawyers, judges, doctors and priests among their ranks.In Edward Ball’s first effort, he sets out to find the descendants of the thousands of Ball family slaves. This was no easy task. Many slaves had no last names. Others moved to distant states. Some descendants had no wish to speak with him. Ball also encountered reticence from his own family. The extended family did not like to talk about slavery. On the few occasions when the subject was raised, they all espoused the party line: 1. Balls never mistreated their slaves 2. Balls never separated slave families and 3. Ball masters never slept with female slaves. Using surviving Ball journals, diaries, ledgers and inventories, Edward was able to contact a good many slave descendants. I found the most moving parts of the book are when Edward’s research validates the oral history of many slave ancestors, and in some cases, helped them to fill in the missing pieces of their genealogical puzzle. Edward’s research also helps him to discover more about his own ancestors. Contrary to Ball oral history, not all Ball plantation owners treated their slaves admirably. Also, slave families were sometimes separated-although mostly due to economic necessity (i.e. when slaves were sold to settle an estate). But what really shocked the author was when he discovered that he had ancestors of color! But save that topic for another book.The only part of Slaves in the Family that bothered me was Edward Ball’s insistence on being an apologist for slavery. Although slavery was a horrible institution, Ball was in no way responsible for what his ancestors did hundreds of years ago. Still, this is just a minor distraction in an otherwise fabulous book. In addition to reading Slaves in the Family, I also listened to it on tape and enjoyed it just as much the second time around. Edward Ball truly gives us a remarkable effort in his first at bat.
Review by Robekah for Slaves in the Family
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‘Slaves In The Family’ is amazing. The research Edward Ball was able to do for this book was tantemount to a sisyphean feat. By tracing the heritage of several slave decendants back to the mid 1600s, he fullfilled something so profound for those families, almost no words can describe it. Most African Americans in this country are resigned to the fact that we’ll never know who our great, great, grandparents were, where in Africa our ancestors once lived, or who we are beyond stolen people. To be able to say ‘I’ve traced my heritage as far back to a relative named Binah, which is a common name in Sierra Leone, so my people are probably from there’ is one of the most spiritual, life-altering pieces of information an African American (who is searching) can be given. In my personal experience, there has always been lack of understanding of myself. I can read and study and dance and commune, and on one level that is all of the knowing I need. But is that because that satisfies my soul, or because that’s all the knowing I’m likely to get in this lifetime? Whatever the case, all my life there’s been this yearning to know who my people are, and it’s a yearning I’ve heard echoed in my sisters and brothers all over the country. Edward Ball is also a brilliant story teller. There are times when I’m reading, that I have to remind myself that it’s non-fiction. Not only because it’s so well written, but because I’m so far removed from the brutal, chattle existence my acestors survived, it is often times impossible to reconcile on the D train to Brooklyn that this country (and on a larger scale – the world) has a continually unpleasant history of treating fellow human beings deplorably, and in some instances, ungodly. Ball’s able to relay American history, not black history (because there is no such thing in this country – we’re all intertwined), in such an unbiased, sometimes humorous, sometimes somber way, that you really can’t believe he’s a descendant of one of the largest, earliest, and longest held plantation owners in South Carolina. The book dedicates equal time to his European relatives, and is unique in that no one is demonized, nor depicted as saintly. It is what it is.I highly recommend it. Just came out in paperback. And there are glossy pictures.
Review by for Slaves in the Family
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The author is a bit too self-indulgent for a book of general interest. About a fourth of the information would be better saved for a Ball family reunion. Another quarter should not be included at all (like the description Ball gives of the old house he stayed in while visiting Charleston). Still, the point of view IS unique and strangely interesting. I would not try to convince someone to read it any more than I would try to talk someone out of reading it. The best part is the oral history of the Ball slave’s descendents.
Review by for Slaves in the Family
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This book is a moving and emotionallly powerful exploration and confrontation by one South Carolina-born writer with the moral consequences of the actions of his slave-owning and -selling ancestors. “Slaves in the Family” recounts Edward Ball’s painstaking research into the history of his family, the first of whom settled near Charlestion at the end of the 17th century. He learns that his ancestors not only owned slaves,but that 2 family branches were large-scale slave traders, importing human beings directly from West Africa, He searches out descendants of slaves who lived on Ball family plantations, preparing careful geneologies and scrupulously identifying and acknowledging black families as descended from his own white ancestors as well as slave women on the plantations. This is the source of the title; he and these black people are members of the same family. Ball goes further than any other work I have seen in following the historic trail all the way to Sierra Leone, searching not only for descendants of some freed Ball family slaves who settled there, but for African families whose ancestors were sellers of other Africans. Ball’s reports of his meetings with these African families are some of the most moving passages in the book. He is not the only person who must struggle to acknowledge evil done by family members in the past. I highly recommend reading this book,especiallly for white folks,as a major contribution to the attempt to reconcile and heal the scars of Americans’ shared racial tragedy. Cheryl B