Queen (129 page)

Read Queen Online

Authors: Alex Haley

BOOK: Queen
4.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

    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.

Other books

The Rake by William F. Buckley
The Midwife's Tale by Delia Parr
A Cage of Roots by Matt Griffin
Summer by Maguire, Eden
Katherine O’Neal by Princess of Thieves
Faith by John Love
The Ice Princess by Camilla Läckberg
Full Moon Rising - 02 by Heath Stallcup