Authors: Alex Haley
tive years of my life listening to those stories and debating them with
him. Some scenes we wrote together, around the kitchen table at his farm,
on a banana boat to Ecuador, and during journeys of exploration to the
South.
I am aware that some historians dispute some of Alex's conclusions. Given
certain constraints of time, I have done my utmost, and have employed
staff, to verify his research. In the mass of reference works we have
consulted, some few stand out: the several volumes of A People's History
by Page Smith; Reconstruction by Eric Foner; Michael Paul Rogin's Fathers
and Children, and specifically for Andrew Jackson, The Border Captain by
Marquis James. The diaries of Mary Chestnut were invaluable for
confin-nations of the society's attitude to relationships such as that
of Jass and Easter, as were several reference works about Thomas
Jefferson and his thirty-nineyear relationship with his slave mistress,
Sally Hernings.
I am keenly aware that this is not the book Alex would have written. Like
Roots, this was to have been a personal history of his family, and he
told it to me as such. But it is not my history, my family, or my people,
black or white. When Alex died, I had to move into new and unfamiliar
territories. Not a historian, I had to piece this history together, and
it is a period of high definition for many Americans. I am sure some will
be offended by my assumptions, and to those offended I can only shrug my
shoulders and say sorry.
Alex wrote the following statement about his intentions:
"This book will convey visceral America. For our land of immigrants is
a testimonial to the merging of the cultures of the world, and of their
bloodlines."
AFTERWORD 789
I am not American, but for me, the overriding achievement of Roots was
as a spectacular metaphor for the travails of every black family in this
country and their journey through history. In that sense Queen is also
a metaphor, a representative woman for the thousands upon thousands of
children of the plantation who were dispossessed of their families and
their heritage. I can only be grateful for this extraordinary opportunity
to pass on what Alex left behind, and grieve with all my heart the
circumstance that brought it about.