In the late summer of 1831, in a remote section of southeastern Virginia, there took place the only effective, sustained revolt in the annals of American Negro slavery...
The revolt was led by a remarkable Negro preacher named Nat Turner, an educated slave who felt himself divinely ordained to annihilate all the white people in the region.
The Confessions of Nat Turner is narrated by Nat himself as he lingers in jail through the cold autumnal days before his execution. The compelling story ranges over the whole of Nat's Life, reaching its inevitable and shattering climax that bloody day in August.
The Confessions of Nat Turner is not only a masterpiece of storytelling; is also reveals in unforgettable human terms the agonizing essence of Negro slavery. Through the mind of a slave, Willie Styron has re-created a catastrophic event, and dramatized the intermingled miseries, frustrations--and hopes--which caused this extraordinary black man to rise up out of the early mists of our history and strike down those who held his people in bondage.
Executive Director, MacDowell + gay dad plus husband. I once hosted TCM. Member of Board of ACTION FOR HOPE. @actforhope My OPINIONS ARE MY OWN.
This is FASCISM! “Matt Krause, a Republican, emailed a list of 850 books to superintendents— “The Confessions of Nat Turner” by William Styron — and works by Ta-Nehisi Coates and Margaret Atwood. Are these works, he asked, on your library shelves?” https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/10/us/texas-critical-race-theory-ban-books.html?referringSource=articleShare
AARP film/TV critic/editor, 39M readers; ex-Hollywood Reporter,EW,TheNation,got Bezos to buy IMDb. Last human Amazon homepage editor.
@NancyRomm I think, for instance, William Styron blew it completely in imagining The Confessions of Nat Turner, but he had a perfect right to try. As anyone does.