Isabel is also exposed to the treatment of prisoners of war, who are left to starve in atrocious conditions, and she observes the behavior of wealthy and selfish White people who often drink to excess and gorge themselves while the enslaved and prisoners go hungry. Isabel survives extreme physical abuse from her enslaver, including beatings, neglect, imprisonment, and more. The story is narrated by Isabel, a young enslaved woman who's devoted to her younger sister, Ruth. This novel pulls no punches about the price of freedom for those who are enslaved or for the American Revolutionary rebels. Chains is a realistic, heartbreaking depiction of life as an enslaved person in war-torn New York in 1776. Parents need to know that Chains is the first book in Laurie Halse Anderson's The Seeds of America trilogy, followed by Forge and Ashes.
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