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The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes Novella (PB) (2026)

$9.99
SKU:
9780999133149
Weight:
0.28 LBS
Width:
6.00 (in)
Height:
0.18 (in)
Depth:
9.00 (in)
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Description

The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes is a vivid, emotionally charged historical novella that follows one man's courageous journey toward freedom during the Civil War. Inspired by real events, it blends action, resilience, and cultural legacy into a fast-moving narrative that resonates with modern readers.

The novella follows a seventeen-year-old Parson Sykes in Southampton County, Virginia, who escapes enslavement in the final winter of the Civil War, enlists in the United States Colored Troops, and returns during Reconstruction determined to claim the rights of citizenship. Guided by forbidden literacy, abolitionist ideas, and the memory of Nat Turner's rebellion three decades earlier, Parson's pursuit of freedom begins with a choice to run. A decision that binds his fate to his brothers Joseph and Henry as they flee eastward under the threat of Confederate patrols.

Once across the Blackwater River, the brothers enlist in the all-Black XXV Corps and enter the complex world of military discipline, racial hierarchy, and political expectation. Parson quickly learns that emancipation is not a singular deliverance, but a contested process that unfolds in courts, hospitals, barracks, and battlefields. As the war reaches its climax, he witnesses the fall of Richmond and the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, events that fracture triumphal narratives and expose the unfinished character of the nation's promises.

The story's emotional fulcrum arrives aboard the USS Meteor, where a mutiny erupts among Black cavalrymen ordered to Texas after the Confederate surrender. The episode crystallizes a new political understanding: that Black military service entitles Black citizenship, and that soldiers who fought for the Union expect the Union to fight for them. Parson's return to Southampton in 1866 places him at the doorstep of Reconstruction, where the Freedmen's Bureau, labor contracts, and civil courts define the earliest contours of Black freedom.

The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes Novella concludes not with resolution, but with belonging. Parson has freed himself, survived the war, claimed a civic identity, and returned to his family. Yet the struggle for rights, property, and political standing has only begun. Parson's story insists that freedom must be taken, defended, and ultimately institutionalized.

Ideal for fans of African American history, genealogy, military narratives, and character-driven storytelling, this novella offers a gripping, unforgettable reading experience.


Details

Author:
David J. Mason
ISBN 10:
0999133144
Pages:
88
Publisher:
Hmg Epublishing LLC
Publication Date:
February 2, 2026
Binding:
Paperback
Weight:
0.28lbs

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