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Uncle Tom's Cabin (Everyman's Library Classics, #206) - Community Reviews back

by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Alfred Kazin
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markk
markk rated it 5 years ago
Harriet Beecher Stowe's book is one that I would classify as important rather than great. It's a powerful condemnation of slavery using the language of Stowe's Christian faith, and her moral outrage at it seeps through nearly every page. This I expected; what I didn't expect was how she developed he...
Blackbird's Book Blog
Blackbird's Book Blog rated it 8 years ago
On the whole, the book had a little too much Jesus for my taste. However, that was kind of the point, wasn't it? It's a plea to Christian people to end the evil of slavery and makes it's case on that basis.I was impressed at the thoroughness of the author's arguments and how well she constructed t...
LindaLeest
LindaLeest rated it 9 years ago
3.5*Sad but inspirational at the same time.
Maven Books
Maven Books rated it 10 years ago
Ugh. I am glad to be done reading this one. I had a copy of this book when I was younger, and somehow I never managed to get around to reading it. Now that I've read the whole thing, I wonder if I just had a psychic feelings of how much I would have hated it if I'd read it. It's my own fault ...
Sarah's Library
Sarah's Library rated it 10 years ago
3/9 - I'm Australian. I don't really know that much about the slaves of America, what I do 'know' is mostly from movies and tv shows (maybe a few books) and so is possibly not all that accurate. My review is coming from the POV of someone who doesn't know anything (well, not anything that can be sai...
Julian Meynell's Books
Julian Meynell's Books rated it 10 years ago
Poor Harriet Beecher Stowe. She has been labelled a racist and condescending by some, but it would be hard to imagine a white American woman, being any less racist than her in 1851. She pretty clearly depicts whites as a group as worse than blacks. Uncle Tom's Cabin is first and foremost a piece ...
And now for something completely wordy...
"Poor critters."
Crash My Book Party
Crash My Book Party rated it 11 years ago
'We ought to be free to meet and mingle - to rise by out individual worth, without any consideration of caste or color; and they who deny us this right are false to their own professed principles of human equality. We ought, in particular, to be allowed here.'When a book has already been so widely d...
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it 11 years ago
I knew a few things about Uncle Tom's Cabin before cracking open the book. From The King and I I knew some characters and scenes like Eliza escaping over the ice floe. I knew that upon meeting author Harriet Beecher Stowe, President Lincoln said she was the "little woman who made this great war"--th...
And now for something completely wordy...
"Poor critters."
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