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Eleven year
old Solomon Freeman and his parents, newly freed slaves,
are building a homestead in north Florida's wilderness,
living their dream of independence. Their battle to survive
is filled with harsh difficulties in this wild and new
home, and they all work long, hard days. Solomon's father,
Moses, dreams of his only son sharing his love for the
land. Lela, his mother, tries to shield Solomon from his
father's expectations, for she knows that the boy's heart
is not in the fields.
Solomon is a natural woodsman, good at fishing and hunting. Though these skills
bring food to their meager table, Moses wants his son to concentrate on farming.
Further distancing father and son is the arrival of a refined Virginian brandishing
a fifteen-foot whip with deadly precision. Solomon is captivated by the man and
the whip while Moses despises the whip and dreads his son's fascination with
the newcomer. Lela struggles to make a home, keep peace between her husband and
son, and continue Solomon's education as they fight to survive.
When the chance comes to go a cattle drive, Solomon jumps at it - though his
parents are reluctant to let him go. He confronts a new world as he rides a Florida
marshtackie horse, wields his whip rounding up a large herd of wild cattle, and
brings them to market at the coast - where he sees sights he had never dreamed
existed.
Are the Freemans strong enough to build a successful homestead? Will they be
welcomed in this hard place where blacks have only been slaves in years past?
Will the family seal its bond though shared hardship or splinter irreparably?
Does Solomon have the wisdom he needs to face challenges beyond his years and
see the family through its perils? |