Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave
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Edition Info
Publisher / Imprint
Modern Library
Modern Library
Publication Date
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
Format
Hardcover / Unabridged
Hardcover / Unabridged
Pages
160
160
ISBN-13
979-8-21-719940-2
979-8-21-719940-2
Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in 1818 on a farm on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. He lived in bondage for two decades, experiencing nearly every brutal treatment, physical and psychological, that a young slave could face—but he also learned to read, a key that would unlock his freedom, even as he was tormented by a fuller understanding of his inhumane fate.
At age twenty, in a cunning and brave plot hatched with a few friends and his intrepid fiancée, Douglass escaped from slavery by train, steamer, and ferryboat over some thirty-eight hours to New York City, disguised as a sailor. His story is one of great drama and risk in the face of what he called the “prison” and the “tomb” of slavery.
But in recollecting these events, Douglass also left us an illegal refugee-immigrant’s language of fear and courage, and forged the greatest of American slave narratives.
At age twenty, in a cunning and brave plot hatched with a few friends and his intrepid fiancée, Douglass escaped from slavery by train, steamer, and ferryboat over some thirty-eight hours to New York City, disguised as a sailor. His story is one of great drama and risk in the face of what he called the “prison” and the “tomb” of slavery.
But in recollecting these events, Douglass also left us an illegal refugee-immigrant’s language of fear and courage, and forged the greatest of American slave narratives.
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Edition Info
Publisher / Imprint
Modern Library
Modern Library
Publication Date
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
Format
Hardcover / Unabridged
Hardcover / Unabridged
Pages
160
160
ISBN-13
979-8-21-719940-2
979-8-21-719940-2
Hardcover
Unabridged
Publication Date:
May 19, 2026
ISBN-13:
979-8-21-719940-2