5/24/2023 0 Comments My Jim by Nancy Rawles![]() ![]() Wide Sargasso Sea, Rawles sketches an impressionistic portrait of a secondary 19th-century fictional character. Writing in sonorous slave dialect, Rawles creates a memorable protagonist in Sadie and builds on Twain's portrayal of Jim while remaining true to the original. ![]() Further disappointment comes after emancipation, when Sadie learns that freedom looks an awful lot like slavery. After countless tribulations, Sadie meets up again with Jim, who has ventured down the Mississippi with Huck Finn in the meantime, but the pair are not reunited. Jim finally escapes on his own, but is presumed dead when his hat is found floating in the Mississippi. ![]() Their plans change when Mas Watson dies, and Sadie is taken by a hateful neighbor while Jim is kept on by Mas Watson's daughter. ![]() Trained as a healer, Sadie helps bring Jim into the world when she herself is "no higher than a barrel." As they grow up together on Mas Watson's Missouri plantation, Jim only has eyes for Sadie, and after an informal marriage following their daughter Lizbeth's birth, they consider fleeing together. , Rawles shifts the focus to Jim's wife, Sadie, whose unspeakable losses set the tone for Jim's flight. In her spare, moving retelling of the story of escaped slave Jim from Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ![]()
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