4.0 

The Boston Way

By Mark Kurlansky
The Boston Way by Mark Kurlansky digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

“Engrossing”—Wall Street Journal

How do good people find the courage to resist and end the greatest evil in their country? An untold story of the Civil War Era: pacifists in Boston who led the fight to end slavery without violence and war.

Has there ever been good violence or a good war? The American Civil War is likely considered to be so since there seemed to be no alternative. Or was there? Before the war, Bostonian abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison correctly predicted that fighting would not bring about real freedom and justice. If emancipation came about through violence, he believed, it would take at least a century for Black people to get their rights. As we now know, it has taken even longer than that.

Here is the story of Garrison and other abolitionists, Black and white, male and female, who advocated a peaceful end to slavery and the start of human rights for Black people. The Boston Clique, as they were called, were victorious in persuading their fellow Bostonians to end Jim Crow laws on Massachusetts’ railroads. Persuasion was, these pacificists believed, the only means to lasting change.

In these pages, we find Frederick Douglass and lesser-known Black abolitionists, William Nell and Charles Remond. We meet leading feminists of the nineteenth century Lydia Maria Child, Margaret Fuller, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Additional key figures include Adin Balou, William Ladd, and Noah Worcester whose voices for nonviolence impacted Leo Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Dr. Martin Luther King.

Still, if it meant a faster end to the horrors of slavery, wasn’t violence the answer? In time, pacificist abolitionists such as Douglass and John Brown came to believe the entire system in the South needed to be overthrown and that could only happen through the shedding of blood. Time may now provide a different perspective.

While history has little memory of abolitionists, and even less for pacifists, nothing can be learned from that which is not remembered. What if the Civil War had never have been fought? Might we now live in a world of far greater justice and peace? What does this mean today as we still pursue “righteous” violence? This is the story of a road not taken.

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The Boston Way Reviews

4.0
“Was the Civil War inevitable? Did it have to come to violence? Many abolitionists didn't think so. They believed that enslavement could be ended without bloodshed. Some, like William Lloyd Garrison, practiced nonviolent resistance. But enslavers and their enablers were too dependent on the economic system that enriched certain groups of white people at the expense of others, and many whites were too dependent on the racism embedded in society, institutions, etc. This book taught me about various abolitionists whom I didn't know much about. It made me consider whether there could have been another way to abolish slavery. I don't know that anything but violence would have worked, as enslavers and others were too addicted to and dependent upon human trafficking and its inherent violence, hierarchy, etc. I doubt they would have voluntarily stopped the violence they constantly enacted upon others. At times I felt as though the author was shying away from explicitly naming how evil enslavement was. He also made no mention of the Indigenous people enslaved by whites. The author used the word "extinct" for a tribal nation, which is rather dehumanizing when it refers to people. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC”
“A brilliant book about the Boston Clique of abolitionists and their friends and comrades. Kurlansky always provides an excellent readable book, regardless of the topic, though this one about anti-slavery and the run up to the Civil War is most important. I felt it could have used slightly more narrowing of the characters in play, but still an outstanding readable book.”

About Mark Kurlansky

Mark Kurlansky was born in Hartford in 1948. He graduated from Butler University with a degree in theater in 1970, refused to serve in the Vietnam war, and has opposed every war since. His book, Nonviolence: The History of a Dangerous Idea won the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He has written a number of bestselling books, including Cod and Salt and 1968: The Year that Rocked the World, as well as a number of books for young readers, six books of fiction, and a translation of a French classic by Emile Zola. This is his fortieth book.

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