Tom Zoellner is the author of Uranium, Train, and The Heartless Stone and coauthor of the New York Times bestseller An Ordinary Man. He teaches at Chapman University and Dartmouth College and is the politics editor for the Los Angeles Review of Books.
A pounding narrative of events that led to the end of slavery in
the British colonies…Zoellner’s vigorous, fast-paced account brings
to life a varied gallery of participants…The revolt failed to
improve conditions for the enslaved in Jamaica, but it crucially
wounded the institution of slavery itself.
*Wall Street Journal*
Zoellner makes deft use of primary sources, and illustrates how the
atmosphere of energetic political reform and events like Sharpe’s
rebellion converged to end slavery in the ‘agricultural prison
camp’ of Jamaica, and in the British Empire at large.
*New Yorker*
Tom Zoellner tells the story of Sam Sharpe’s revolution manqué, and
the subsequent abolition of slavery in Jamaica, in a way that’s
acutely relevant to the racial unrest of our own time. Island on
Fire is impeccably researched and seductively readable.
*Madison Smartt Bell, author of All Souls' Rising*
Tom Zoellner is completely right that the 1831–1832 revolt in
Jamaica helped break the back of slavery in the British Empire.
It’s high time that we had a book like the splendid one he has
written: a highly readable but carefully documented account of the
greatest of all British slave rebellions, the miseries that led to
it, and the momentous changes it wrought.
*Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopold’s Ghost and Bury
the Chains*
With vivid prose, Tom Zoellner captures the horrors of the brutal
sugar plantations of Jamaica as well as that brief but transcendent
moment when a group of enslaved people sought, against tremendous
odds, to transform the island into a space of liberation. Island on
Fire offers a haunting parable of how history is made and remade up
to the present day.
*Karl Jacoby, author of Shadows at Dawn*
Island on Fire is a gripping account of the five weeks when Jamaica
burned in a rebellion led by enslaved preacher Samuel Sharpe. Tom
Zoellner recounts these dramatic events with great energy and
detail, crucially setting Sharpe’s story—which until now has not
been well known away from the island—in the wider context of the
struggle for abolition on both sides of the Atlantic.
*Carrie Gibson, author of Empire’s Crossroads*
A riveting recounting of the causes and consequences of the war for
emancipation led by Samuel Sharpe in Jamaica. Island on Fire
catalogues in vivid detail the price that the freedom fighters paid
for saying ‘no’ to continued enslavement against the backdrop of a
growing antislavery movement on both sides of the Atlantic. It is a
chilling reminder of colonial British brutality. One will need a
strong stomach to read this moving account without shedding
tears.
*Verene A. Shepherd, author of Livestock, Sugar and Slavery:
Contested Terrain in Colonial Jamaica*
An important contribution to our understanding of what Saidiya
Hartman has described as the ‘afterlife’ of slavery. Zoellner
documents in vivid detail the base violence and inhumanity of
institutionalized slavery in plantation-era Jamaica. But he also
tells a story of irrepressible resistance and self-organization
that generated the slave rebellion of 1831…His storytelling ability
makes this history extremely readable, if not less painful.
*Jacobin*
An engaging history of the horrific system of slavery practiced in
Jamaica and the slave revolt that finally killed it…Resurrecting
this important historical episode, Zoellner moves nimbly through
the research, giving an exciting account of the events as well as
the significant consequences when the news reached England weeks
later.
*Kirkus Reviews (starred review)*
Highlights the lives of the many Jamaicans who sacrificed their
lives for freedom, putting it in the context of Britain’s passage
of the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833. Impressively researched, this
is a valuable addition to Jamaica’s documented history.
*Southern California News Group*
[A] rollicking history…[The] arsonists, fighting for their freedom,
are the people who come out most vividly in Island on Fire. The
book comes alive when describing the enslaved people who used
violence to try to overturn White rule and who were brutally
murdered and executed as a result, in an orgy of White
bloodletting.
*New West Indian Guide*
Masterful…Zoellner’s fast-paced story recounts a five-week long
rebellion led by enslaved preacher Samuel Sharpe…Strongly
recommended…captur[es] the nuances of enslaved people’s struggle
for freedom against brutally exploitative systems.
*Global Americans*
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