Parents' Guide to Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley Bryan

Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley Bryan Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Kyle Jackson By Kyle Jackson , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 6+

Document inspires vivid, moving portraits of enslaved lives.

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Parent and Kid Reviews

What's the Story?

FREEDOM OVER ME envisions the stories of 11 enslaved people on a plantation in the American South in the 1820s. Using their given name, age, and price -- the only details available in the historical record -- author-illustrator Ashley Bryan fleshes out full stories for each person, showing the wide range of experiences of enslaved people and focusing on the coping and resistance mechanisms the enslaved used to survive. By highlighting each one's special skills and individual dreams and memories, Freedom Over Me reminds readers of the human cost of slavery, as well as the resilience and dignity of those who were caught in the brutal and destructive system.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
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Kids say : Not yet rated

Ashley Bryan's storytelling seamlessly integrates a bounty of historical information into an easily digestible picture book, making it an ideal introduction to a complex subject. The evocative illustrations in Freedom Over Me are superimposed on collages of documents of transactions for purchase of enslaved people, bringing the primary-source documents historians use to construct narratives of enslaved people into view. The nuance, emotion, and soul in each portrayal gives young readers a chance to engage openly and honestly with one of the darkest and most difficult-to-approach chapters in American history.

Free-verse, first-person narratives effectively give personalities, hopes, and dreams to the individuals who were only names with a monetary value noted in an actual 1828 will. For example, an enslaved man named Stephen says, "My owners see me/ as their property,/ following their orders, doing their bidding./ But through my carpentry/ I feel the accomplishment/ and pride/ of a free man." Althea, the plantation laundress whose value is listed in the will as $175, says, "As slaves,/ we do what our owners demand of us./ As human beings,/ our real lives/ are our precious secret."

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the wide variety of slave experiences in the New World. What sorts of tasks might enslaved people perform? How did where they were brought affect what their lives were like?

  • What do you think of historical fiction? Even though the details of the stories are made up by the author, what can they tell us about how people might have lived in the past?

  • How did enslaved people create families? How and why did plantation owners and traders of enslaved people work to destroy or disrupt family units?

Book Details

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Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley Bryan Poster Image

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