1,001 Novels: A Library of America
The Tubman Command (2019)
by Elizabeth Hobbs
Combahee River, South Carolina
South Carolina: 8/14
The Tubman Command is a work of historical fiction imagining an episode from the career of Harriet Tubman. Tubman is best known for her success as a conductor on the Underground Railroad, where she personally led hundreds of enslaved people to freedom. This book is about her work for the Union Army during the Civil War as a scout, where she was sent ahead of Union forces to reconnoiter and gather information, at great personal risk to her person. Specifically, it's about a raid up the Combahee River in South Carolina to free blacks from several of the great plantations in that part of the state. It's a fairly interesting story but the fact that this is a white author writing from the perspective of a famous African American person made me a tad uncomfortable. Certainly, if you know that fact you know that there is not going to be a single negative observation written about any of the African American characters. The Tubman Command is more like a hagiographic work than a novel.
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