• Home
Menu

Nightlife Publishing

Stories of Crime and Passion
  • Home

IMPURE THOUGHTS

The Blog of Power, Seduction and War

Slave Ship: A Book Review

May 26, 2015

By Gamal Hennessy

I’m developing a science fiction novel about slavery called Humanity’s Fall. The basic concept is Twelve Years a Slave meets Star Trek and follows the ordeal of one woman ripped from her brownstone in Brooklyn and thrust into the belly of a ship to be sold on the other side of the galaxy. The research for this book includes several sources exploring the impact of the Middle Passage including well-known works like Roots and Amistad to more general books like The African Slave Trade and Still I Rise. But as I get ready to write the first draft of Humanity’s Fall, I think the book Slave Ship: A Human History by Marcus Rediker will have the most impact on my story.

Slave Ship looks at the mechanism of African slavery; the ships and men who captured, bought, confined, tortured, killed and sold millions of people over the course of three centuries. It explores in depth the functioning of the ship, examining the vehicle of the Middle Passage from several viewpoints. The slave ship is seen as:

  • An investment for speculative European businessmen
  • A debt prison for unwary sailors
  • A marketplace for Africans selling slaves
  • A prison for Africans captured
  • A cemetery for slaves and crew killed in the journey
  • A factory for the creation of slaves
  • A battleground for slave inter slave conflict and collective rebellion
  • An incubator for the concept of race
  • A communal space for the creation of shared kinship
  • A symbol of evil for abolitionists

Rediker breaks down the Middle Passage in stages, showing how ships were commissioned and purchased, how captains and crews were formed, the process of buying people, attempting to simultaneously break their spirit but keep their bodies intact for sale, the successful and unsuccessful attempts to escape, overthrow or commit suicide and the complex social relationships spending months on the ship would create. By drawing a historical and narrative thread from the people most distant from the process (who gained the most wealth) to the people most suffered the most intimate pain and lost the most, Slave Ship makes an argument for the ship itself to be one of the most influential and at the same time most ignored elements of social development in America.

I read this book during the surge in media coverage over unarmed black men being killed in various parts of the country and the groundswell of racism playing out in various levels of society. In light of this reality and against the backdrop of building my own novel, I began to see parallels between our own time and the collective experience of the slave ship. It was easy to see the bankers and billionaires as the distant businessmen, too far removed from the process to have any interest in it beyond their profit. The police became the sailors and reluctant prison guards. The minority communities become the slaves and the incubator, factory, marketplace and communal space of the ship became the spaces we inhabit now, on and offline. The ship came to represent so much of the American experience, it became easy, perhaps clichéd, to imagine America as a slave ship we are all trapped on. Slave Ship will have a lasting impact on me, not just for the inspiration it provides for my work, but in the way I perceive the world I live in.

Have fun.

Gamal

In Crime, Society, Book Reviews Tags Humanity's Fall, Slave Ship, Sex slavery, Marcus Rediker, Gamal Hennessy, Book Review
Comment

The Truth Behind the Lies

March 24, 2015

by Gamal Hennessy

My recent novel A Touch of Honey is a work of fiction, but many of aspects of this story are based on actual events. This is a sample of my background research for anyone who is interested in diving deeper into these topics.

Articles

All links retrieved as of January 29, 2015

  • ABC News.com(2013) Cairns man Klaus Andres, who admitted to dissolving wife's body in acid, jailed for life
  • Associated Press (2013) NY Bar Owner Sentenced 60 Years for Sex Trafficking
  • Bellware, Kim for the Huffington Post (2015) Hundreds Arrested in Super Bowl Sex Trafficking Sting
  • Bradley, Michael for BBC News (2013) Human Trafficking: Why do so many victims refuse help?
  • Booth, William for the Washington Post (2009) ‘Stewmaker’ Stirs Horror in Mexico
  • Buchbinder, Sharon for the Daily Beast (2013) When Women Traffic Other Women
  • Kelly, Annie for The Guardian (2014) the tattooed trafficking survivors reclaiming their past
  • Pearson, Erica for the New York Daily News (2013) Sex trafficking operations expand outside of Queens into Suburbs
  • Tracy, Tom for the New York Daily News (2015) NYPD officer snared in Brooklyn prostitution sting

A Touch of Honey is now available from multiple book sellers.

Have fun.

Gamal

 

In Writing, Violence, Society, Crime Tags Gamal Hennessy, Sex slavery, Al Jazeera, A Touch of Honey, crime
Comment

My Novels are on Sale Now at Amazon!

If you enjoy sex, spies, crime and passion mixed into an exciting story, then you're in the right place...


Book One: Smooth Operator4.5 out of 5 stars$0.99 on Amazon

Book One: Smooth Operator

4.5 out of 5 stars

$0.99 on Amazon

Book Two: A Taste of Honey4.6 out of 5 stars$1.99 on Amazon

Book Two: A Taste of Honey

4.6 out of 5 stars

$1.99 on Amazon

Book Three: A Touch of Honey4 out of 5 stars$2.99 on Amazon

Book Three: A Touch of Honey

4 out of 5 stars

$2.99 on Amazon

Book Four: Smoke and Shadow4.3 out of 5 stars$3.99 on Amazon

Book Four: Smoke and Shadow

4.3 out of 5 stars

$3.99 on Amazon

Book Five: Wild Honey4 out of 5 stars $4.99 on Amazon

Book Five: Wild Honey

4 out of 5 stars

$4.99 on Amazon

Screams of Passion.jpg
Contact

If you'd like to  send me an email, please send your message to gamalhennessy@gmail.com

If you'd like to find me online, click the "Contact" link for access to my social networks

Paris.jpg
About

The short story of my journey into the writing life.


Powered by Squarespace