We look forward to seeing you on your next visit to the library. Find a location near you.

Song of Slaves in the Desert
(Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published:
Sourcebooks 2012
Status:
Available from OverDrive
Description

Lyrically told and impeccably researched, Song of Slaves in the Desert traces the story of Nathaniel Pereira, a young New Yorker who's called to revive his uncle's South Carolina plantation. Nathaniel is struck by the sobering reality of slavery as he becomes captivated by the young slave Liza. Liza's never known the meaning of freedom, and as Nathaniel plunges into the murky mysteries of slavery, she can see how he might change her life forever. A masterful writer, Cheuse traces the thread of slavery from sixteenth-century Timbuktu and grapples with the wild nature of love.

Also in This Series
Formats
Adobe EPUB eBook
Works on all eReaders (except Kindles), desktop computers and mobile devices with reading apps installed.
Kindle Book
Works on Kindles and devices with a Kindle app installed.
OverDrive Read
Need Help?
If you are having problem transferring a title to your device, please fill out this support form or visit the library so we can help you to use our eBooks and eAudio Books.
More Like This
Other Editions and Formats
More Copies In LINK+
Loading LINK+ Copies...
More Details
Format:
Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read
Street Date:
07/01/2012
Language:
English
ISBN:
9781402263149
ASIN:
B004MME710
Reviews from GoodReads
Loading GoodReads Reviews.
Citations
APA Citation (style guide)

Alan Cheuse. (2012). Song of Slaves in the Desert. Sourcebooks.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Alan Cheuse. 2012. Song of Slaves in the Desert. Sourcebooks.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Alan Cheuse, Song of Slaves in the Desert. Sourcebooks, 2012.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Alan Cheuse. Song of Slaves in the Desert. Sourcebooks, 2012.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
Copy Details
LibraryOwnedAvailable
Shared Digital Collection11
Staff View
Grouped Work ID:
34026e19-c455-539c-b2f6-7e6db9e15bc0
Go To Grouped Work
Needs Update?:
No
Date Added:
Jun 12, 2018 18:12:56
Date Updated:
Jun 12, 2018 18:12:56
Last Metadata Check:
Apr 14, 2024 09:52:54
Last Metadata Change:
Jun 04, 2023 14:43:11
Last Availability Check:
Apr 14, 2024 09:52:59
Last Availability Change:
Apr 03, 2021 14:24:18
Last Grouped Work Modification Time:
Apr 18, 2024 02:10:20

OverDrive Product Record

sortTitle
Song of Slaves in the Desert
crossRefId
532003
images
    • cover:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/0174-1/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img100.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • thumbnail:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/0174-1/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img200.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover150Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/0174-1/D85/983/0D/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img150.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover300Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/0174-1/D85/983/0D/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img400.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
formats
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9781402263149
      • name: Adobe EPUB eBook
      • id: ebook-epub-adobe
      • identifiers:
            • type: ASIN
            • value: B004MME710
      • name: Kindle Book
      • id: ebook-kindle
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9781402263149
      • name: OverDrive Read
      • id: ebook-overdrive
mediaType
eBook
primaryCreator
    • role: Author
    • name: Alan Cheuse
id
d859830d-6b02-4b38-a689-234aa60d8eab
title
Song of Slaves in the Desert
starRating
3.2
dateAdded
2011-12-09T17:48:45.32-05:00
contentDetails
      • href: https://link.overdrive.com/?websiteID=141&titleID=532003
      • type: text/html
      • account:
          • name: Sacramento Public Library (CA)
          • id: 1151

OverDrive MetaData

isPublicDomain
False
formats
      • fileName: SongofSlavesintheDes_9781402263149_532003
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 773888
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9781402263149
      • rights:
            • type: Copying
            • value: 0
            • type: Printing
            • value: -1
            • type: Lending
            • value: 0
            • type: ReadAloud
            • value: 1
            • type: ExpirationRights
            • value: 0
      • name: Adobe EPUB eBook
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-epub-adobe
      • onSaleDate: 6/1/2011
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-epub-adobe
            • url: https://excerpts.cdn.overdrive.com/FormatType-410/0174-1/D85/983/0D/SongofSlavesintheDesert.epub
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
      • fileName: SongofSlavesintheDes_532003
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 0
      • identifiers:
            • type: ASIN
            • value: B004MME710
      • name: Kindle Book
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-kindle
      • onSaleDate: 6/1/2011
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-epub-adobe
            • url: https://excerpts.cdn.overdrive.com/FormatType-410/0174-1/D85/983/0D/SongofSlavesintheDesert.epub
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
      • fileName: SongofSlavesintheDes_9781402263149_532003
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 0
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9781402263149
      • name: OverDrive Read
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-overdrive
      • onSaleDate: 6/1/2011
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-epub-adobe
            • url: https://excerpts.cdn.overdrive.com/FormatType-410/0174-1/D85/983/0D/SongofSlavesintheDesert.epub
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
keywords
      • value: Literary
creators
      • role: Author
      • fileAs: Cheuse, Alan
      • bioText:

        Novelist, essayist, and story writer Alan Cheuse (Washington, D.C.) has been described as "The Voice of Books on NPR." The author of A Trance after Breakfast, he has also written three novels and a pair of novellas. He is the editor of Seeing Ourselves: Great Early American Short Stories and co-editor of Writers' Workshop in a Book. He teaches writing at George Mason University.

      • name: Alan Cheuse
imprint
Sourcebooks Landmark
publishDate
2012-07-01T00:00:00-04:00
isOwnedByCollections
True
title
Song of Slaves in the Desert
fullDescription

Lyrically told and impeccably researched, Song of Slaves in the Desert traces the story of Nathaniel Pereira, a young New Yorker who's called to revive his uncle's South Carolina plantation. Nathaniel is struck by the sobering reality of slavery as he becomes captivated by the young slave Liza. Liza's never known the meaning of freedom, and as Nathaniel plunges into the murky mysteries of slavery, she can see how he might change her life forever. A masterful writer, Cheuse traces the thread of slavery from sixteenth-century Timbuktu and grapples with the wild nature of love.

reviews
      • premium: False
      • source: Charles Frazier, author of Cold Mountain and Thirteen Moons
      • content: "Compelling fiction that digs deep into the mystery and sacrifice and selfishness of creative vision."
      • premium: True
      • source: Publisher's Weekly
      • content:

        December 20, 2010
        Cheuse's busy follow-up to To Catch the Lightning reaches frantically in multiple directions but lacks a center of narrative gravity, resulting in a florid and off-kilter tale of slavery and forbidden love. Nathaniel Pereira, son of a New York Jewish merchant, gets dispatched to revive an uncle's South Carolina plantation, but his story is derailed by the interspersed accounts of several generations of women driven from slavery in Timbuktu to bondage in the United States. On a slave voyage, the brutality is as vivid as the prose is lurid ("What happened next, we can never truly know, unless we find ourselves forced into the immediate degradation sometimes suffered by the victim, usually female, when man turns beast and instinct—raw, foul, animal, devilish, destructive instinct—overpowers her"), and once the plantation slave Liza becomes an object of purplish desire for Nathaniel (a "tincture of desire now flavoring the spittle that we mingled in our mouths"), readers will realize that things cannot end well. After the convoluted story finds its way to a fiery conclusion, Cheuse tacks on a rushed and tidy resolution that undermines the novel's strongest feature: its depiction of the horrors of slavery.

      • premium: True
      • source: Kirkus
      • content:

        Starred review from January 15, 2011

        An imaginative, multigenerational exploration of the world of Southern slavery in the closing days of the "peculiar institution."

        The Jews, famously, knew slavery in Egypt. Some of them knew what it was like to drive slaves, too, whence the premise of this latest novel by NPR commentator and writer Cheuse (To Catch the Lightning, 2008, etc.). Nathaniel Pereira, of Sephardic/Dutch descent and a proud New Yorker, is dreaming of his grand tour to the Continent when fate intervenes in the form of some necessary business, when his father dispatches him to the South to check on the family holdings in not cotton or tobacco but rice, "Southern rice to feed the belly of the northern nation." Ominously but usefully, father then provides his young son with a pistol. The 1,000-acre piedmont plantation in question is big enough to hide all kinds of mystery, and there's plenty to be had, not least because—well, let us say that bloodlines have become a bit confused over the generations. Nathaniel himself falls sway to the charms of an enchanting resident of the plantation, who, though enslaved, exercises plenty of influence over the place; but even that is not enough to ward off the inevitable antebellum decadence. Nathaniel is more thoughtful than most commercial travelers, quick to note ironies (as when Cheuse cleverly sets him to thinking of the problem of free will) and beset with existential questions suitable to a Hamlet: Is it moral to profit from slavery, even if from afar? Is blood thicker than water? Cheuse owes obvious debts to Herman Melville and his generation ("Call me Ishmael," indeed), less obvious ones to the likes of Frederick Busch, William Styron and perhaps even Boccaccio; like all of them, he imagines whole, self-contained worlds, in this case the claustrophobic world of the plantation South and its whispers of miscegenation and incest—powerful stuff with which to pepper any story, particular in skillful hands such as these.

        A complex, richly detailed story, which reaches an unexpected conclusion that, among other things, is likely to make the reader thirsty.

        (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

      • premium: True
      • source: Library Journal
      • content:

        February 1, 2011

        In his latest novel, Cheuse (To Catch the Lightning) covers an extensive swath of history, from Australopithecus walking though volcanic ash up to 19th-century America. He manages this through intertwining story lines. One traces the seemingly timeless journey from Timbuktu to other parts of West Africa of several generations of African women caught in the slave trade. The other introduces us to a family of Jewish slave-holding plantation owners outside Charleston, SC, who buy an African woman from that lineage at the slave market. A young scion of the New York branch of the family visits the plantation and falls in love with the woman's daughter, a beautiful slave girl named Liza. Ultimately, Liza finds her way to freedom and her son writes the journal that ties the whole family narrative together. VERDICT With its broad scope and portentous 19th-century tone, the novel's many characters seem more symbolic than realistic. Still, Cheuse's depiction of the horrific slave ship passage to America is worth the price of admission.--Reba Leiding, James Madison Univ. Lib., Harrisonburg, VA

        Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

popularity
115
links
    • self:
        • href: https://api.overdrive.com/v1/collections/v1L1BWwAAAA2I/products/d859830d-6b02-4b38-a689-234aa60d8eab/metadata
        • type: application/vnd.overdrive.api+json
id
d859830d-6b02-4b38-a689-234aa60d8eab
starRating
3.1
images
    • cover:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/0174-1/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img100.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • thumbnail:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/0174-1/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img200.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover150Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/0174-1/D85/983/0D/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img150.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover300Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/0174-1/D85/983/0D/{D859830D-6B02-4B38-A689-234AA60D8EAB}Img400.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
isPublicPerformanceAllowed
False
languages
      • code: en
      • name: English
subjects
      • value: Fiction
      • value: Literature
      • value: Historical Fiction
publishDateText
07/01/2012
otherFormatIdentifiers
      • type: ISBN
      • value: 9781402267031
mediaType
eBook
shortDescription

Lyrically told and impeccably researched, Song of Slaves in the Desert traces the story of Nathaniel Pereira, a young New Yorker who's called to revive his uncle's South Carolina plantation. Nathaniel is struck by the sobering reality of slavery as he becomes captivated by the young slave Liza. Liza's never known the meaning of freedom, and as Nathaniel plunges into the murky mysteries of slavery, she can see how he might change her life forever. A masterful writer, Cheuse traces the thread of slavery from sixteenth-century Timbuktu and grapples with the wild nature of love.

sortTitle
Song of Slaves in the Desert
crossRefId
532003
publisher
Sourcebooks
bisacCodes
      • code: FIC000000
      • description: Fiction / General
      • code: FIC014000
      • description: FICTION / Historical / General
      • code: FIC019000
      • description: Fiction / Literary