Author Sidney Morrison will be our guest speaker for the service on Sunday, August 4th. But you can get a sneak peek by attending his presentation at the Royce Branch library in downtown Grass Valley on Friday, August 2! Mr. Morrison will read from his new book, Frederick Douglass, a novel (2024 hardcover, 672 pages, hawthornebooks.com)

Frederick Douglass dedicated his life to racial equality and this novel is an homage to him as a significant figure in U.S. and African American History.

sidneymorrison.com
Author Events - Grass Valley: Sidney Morrison (photo of middle-aged brown-skinned bald man smiling warmly and leaning on a chair) next to an image of the book cover, a graphical portrait of Frederick Douglass; event details: Fri., Aug. 2 @ 5:00pm Grass Valley Library 200 Mill St; Sun., Aug. 4 @ 10:30am UUCM 246 S. Church St; Sponsored by Color Me Human, Grass Valley Library, UUCM, & Baha'i Community

Frederick Douglass was the most prominent African American of the 19th Century and Sidney Morrison has created a mesmerizing historical novel richly detailing his life and the Civil War Era. This portrayal of Douglass distinguishes him asone of the founders of American democracy instrumental in ending the institution of slavery from which he escapes to become a fierce abolitionist, gifted orator, and newspaper publisher of The North Star. Douglass collaborates with William Lloyd Garrison, John Brown, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and the Underground Railroad, as well as Presidents Abraham Lincoln to Grover Cleveland and becomes the first African American to hold esteemed political positions such as U.S. Marshal of the District of Columbia and Minister to Haiti.

What makes this portrayal of Douglass unique is that it takes readers beyond the public persona by also detailing the women in his life: Anna Murray Douglass, instrumental to his escape, becomes his wife and the mother to his five children; English abolitionist, Julia Griffith, works with Douglass until a scandalized community whispers about an extramarital affair and she returns to England; German journalist, Ottilie Assing, dies by suicide after years of waiting for Douglass to marry her and instead he marries a white abolitionist 20 years his junior, Helen Pitts, following Anna’s death. These stories are central to understanding the great man as a fully complex human whose life was rich in conflict, drama, and suspense.


Event Details

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  • Venue: Grass Valley Royce Library
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