Gripping and emotional—the tragic, hopeful story of a woman long-forgotten
Morayo is a young African girl whose naive curiosity changes her life forever. She’s just stealing glimpses at foreigners one day when she is captured and taken onto a ship that sends her across the sea.
In the year 1574, this unexpected trip turns out to be a gruesome journey into slavery that brings her to the metaphorical depths of hell and back countless times. With a resilient nature and the hope of one day returning home, Morayo endures trips around the world as she fights for her freedom and becomes someone she can hardly recognize.
An Uncharted World is a story you’re not going to forget. You are in good hands with Susan Storer Clark. This eloquent, yet plot-driven story maintains historical accuracies and deep reader engagement while never sugarcoating the realities of slavery. This is a book that honors real people and contends with themes of loss, romance, history, culture, passion, and resilience. I couldn’t put it down.
As Morayo is stripped from her land, she ends up in the service of Portuguese aristocrats, and she is forced to learn a new language, new skills, and, unfortunately, pleasure her owner. He is not the only man who will claim ownership over Morayo. The book changes settings often, flocking from Africa to Brazil to Peru and across multiple oceans. Her good looks and intelligence make her a highly sought-after woman for many people in power.
The changing of the settings confirms the idea that a slave’s fate is truly not up to them. The mental load of not knowing what each day could hold is just as shocking as the physical violence. It’s emotional to read as Morayo is given only a few hours or a day to uproot herself and start again in a new place where she does not know the language. To stay alive, she’s got to learn and excel in new skills despite the unpredictability of what’s asked of her.
While tragedy is a common occurrence in An Uncharted World, Clark doesn’t focus solely on the bad. There are glimpses of hope that come and go as Morayo makes her journey. One of my favorites is Pablo, a young man who thinks religious life will be his way out of tragedy, but he falls in love with Morayo nonetheless. Their brief but thrilling romance is hot to say the least, and the heat from that flame lingers. She also finds friendship in unlikely places and stays connected with divine beings from her culture, and it adds real richness to the world of the story.
Maria, as Morayo is often called in the book, was a real person. Some of the occurrences in the book really happened to her, and with this book, Clark saves her from being lost in history. An Uncharted World brings great light to darkness, provides a thrilling backstory to a real person who will open your eyes and make you feel.
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