From Evaristo's Q & A with Elizabeth Floyd Mair of the (Albany) Times Union:
Q: This is an unusual idea for a novel. How did the idea first come to you?The Page 69 Test: Blonde Roots.
A: I wanted to write about slavery, or more specifically, Britain's involvement in the slave trade, which was, by the 1730s, Europe's largest slave-trading nation. Weare all now familiar with America's slave history, but Britain's own history, which was considerable and of incredible economic benefit to the country, has been overlooked. Slavery is a subject that elicits very strong, often inflexible responses, and I wanted to find a way to explore this history afresh. I came up with the idea of inverting the history so that Africans enslaved Europeans. As with all my books, "Blonde Roots" began with the germ of an idea that I pushed to see if it had book-length potential. The more I wrote, the more I found there was to write about, and it became an adventure that was not only about transatlantic slavery but also about its legacy in the form of modern-day racism.
Q: How does the legacy of slavery differ today for blacks in the United Kingdom and blacks in the United States?
A. [read on]
--Marshal Zeringue