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RUNAWAY by Ray Anthony Shepard Kirkus Star

RUNAWAY

The Daring Escape of Ona Judge

by Ray Anthony Shepard ; illustrated by Keith Mallett

Pub Date: Jan. 5th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-374-30704-2
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

The true story of a young enslaved woman who escapes the family of George Washington.

“Ona Judge, Ona Judge / Why you run away / Ona Judge?” So begins this inquiry into her quest for freedom; the question is repeated throughout the narrative. “You had fine dresses [and] soft shoes” and other material benefits most enslaved people lacked. Ona is passed around the Washington family, first a playmate for the children, then a personal servant and seamstress for Martha Washington, never working in the fields. But when an aging Martha gives Ona to her granddaughter Eliza, “now a mean and sassy woman,” Ona walks out into the Philadelphia night. Here, the tenor of the text changes—“Didn’t you know you broke the law?”—and the illustrations become dark as she makes her way around corners and hides in a basement. A framed picture—a departure from the full-bleed pages and spreads that depict the current action—gives a glimpse of her future family life: “You dreamed a dream / You would make true.” As she reaches a boat, and freedom, day breaks and readers see the first hint of Ona’s smile. “Then run, Ona Judge, run.” With a distinctive, haunting voice, powerful images, and thought-provoking story structure, this unique look at a remarkable young woman’s life choices and decisions offers an utterly necessary but seldom highlighted perspective on the contradictions within our society’s foundations. (This book was reviewed digitally with 11-by-17-inch double-page spreads viewed at 42.1% of actual size.)

A powerful antidote to whitewashed cultural mythology.

(author’s note, timeline, bibliography, places to visit) (Informational picture book. 4-9)