c.2017, St. Martinโ€™s Press
$25.99 ($36.99 Canada)
272 pages

It was a Sure Thing.

A canโ€™t-miss, a safe bet that you couldnโ€™t possibly fail โ€” or could you? Isnโ€™t there always a danger of losing in a gamble, or at least not winning? What kind of odds would make you take a risky bet? As in the new book โ€œBe Free or Dieโ€ by Cate Lineberry, would you put your familyโ€™s lives on the line?

Because the law in 1839 said that a slave womanโ€™s children were automatically enslaved, Robert Smalls was owned by Henry McKee the minute Smalls was born. Because his mother was a house slave, the illiterate Smalls spent his childhood toiling inside the McKee home, rather than being put afield to work. There, he was said be smart, capable, articulate, and โ€œwell-liked by the McKee family.โ€

That, perhaps, is why McKee trusted Smalls enough to send him, alone at age twelve, to Charleston where he was โ€œhired out โ€ฆ and largely left to fend for himself.โ€ There, Smalls worked a series of odd jobs until he ultimately found work on cargo ships. Heโ€™d gotten married by then, and his wifeโ€™s owner promised that Smalls could buy Hannah and their daughter for $800; with that in mind, Smalls landed work on the Planter, a 147-foot paddlewheel steamer owned by a Southern businessman and docked in Charleston, near the Confederate generalโ€™s headquarters.

Though he was able to save the $1 a month McKee gave him, Smalls knew that his wifeโ€™s price could change on a whim. Hannah was pregnant, and that worried him, too.
There was only one choice.

After observing carefully for weeks, and deciding to trust his likewise-enslaved fellow shipmates, Smalls waited for the right time. โ€œOn a mild May evening โ€ฆ in 1862,โ€ when the white crew of the Planter disembarked, Smalls seized control of the steamer, eased the Planter upstream to fetch his family and a few others whoโ€™d hidden in another ship, then snuck the Planter back downstream past heavily armed guards, soldiers, and Fort Sumter. He skillfully brought the steamer out of the harbor and delivered it, loaded with cannons and Confederacy secrets, directly into the hands of the Unionโ€ฆ

Oh, my, if youโ€™re looking for a thriller for your summertime reading, you just found one. โ€œBe Free or Dieโ€ is more exciting than any old novel.

Beginning with the daring escape itself, author Cate Lineberry moves back-and-forward-again to tell Smallsโ€™ story, which gives readers even more of a sense of why his actions were so astounding. No such saga is complete without more about the era itself, of course, which will delight Civil War buffs โ€” and then Lineberry story tells even further, from the unique point of view of 1870s-era Charlestonians, Northerners, newly released slaves, and Reconstructionists.

Be sure you find out what happened to the Planter. Thatโ€™s all Iโ€™m sayingโ€ฆ

This is one of the better almost-forgotten stories from history, and you can put it on your reading list now. Go ahead. If youโ€™re in search for that one book this summer, โ€œBe Free or Dieโ€ is a sure thing.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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