Olaudah Equiano's Interesting Narrative, in which the author describes
his birth in Africa, his enslavement and transportation to America, and
his journey from slavery to freedom, was published just a few days
before the British parliament first debated the abolition of the slave
trade in 1789. As a first-hand account of the horrors of slavery, it was
a vital part of the campaign to end that "accursed trade," but the book
is far more than merely a political pamphlet. It is the most important
African autobiography of the eighteenth century, telling the story of a
life of high adventure on land and sea, from the Caribbean to the North
Pole via America, Turkey, and Great Britain, in a style that remains
lively and engaging to this day.
This new edition includes an introduction surveying the recent debates
about Equiano's birthplace and identity, and showing how the book
achieved its increasingly central position among the great works of
eighteenth-century literature.