
Roots
by Alex Haley
Tracing one American family back to where it began.
you want to understand the slave trade as a story with a specific beginning in a specific place rather than an abstraction called history
⚡ Choose Your Route ⚡
Not sold directly on this site. Support indie bookstores with a new copy, or go sustainable with a used one.
Supports independent bookstores
Secondhand & sustainable
Reference price shown. Other editions may be available.
Haley spent twelve years tracing his family back through American slavery to Kunta Kinte, a Mandinka man from the Gambian village of Juffure who was enslaved in 1767. Whatever its factual complications — and there are some — Roots changed how Black Americans related to Africa and how America understood slavery. Not as an abstraction but as the severing of a specific person from a specific place. The dispatch that made the connection between the African coast and the American South visible for the first time to millions of readers.
WHERE THIS BOOK LIVES
- Setting
- West Africa
- Voice
- A West Africa voice — written from the inside
- Themes
- Founding LiesGenerationsWitness
