Why did I read this book, give it a 5-star rating, and put it on my “Favorites” shelf list?
First, it is a Ken Follett material; I believe his only mission in life is to sway people into loving anything he writes— I say this because it has certainly worked for me. Second, the story is set in a former era—the late 18th century—and I am such a fan of period/historical reads. Third, it talks about a young man’s struggle against social injustices, a subject to which I am largely sympathetic (having worked closely with peasant farmers and workers during my time as a student activist). Lastly, the book’s hero, Malachi “Mack” McAsh, hails from Scotland, and I devoured anything Scottish during the time I was reading this novel.
A combination of all four reasons gives me a story that is both compelling and worth reading.
The story starts with Mack wanting to be free from the chains that bind him to coal mining slavery and getting severely punished for it. Sick of a life of servitude, he escapes to London in the hope of a better life and witnesses the same sordid condition of the workers and poor people in general. He finds work as a coal heaver and later leads a gang of workers. He also organizes his gang to assert better working conditions and acceptable wages for themselves, but authorities view it as subversive and soon they fabricated charges against him. He is arrested, found ‘guilty’ of fomenting a riot (an offense punishable by death), and sent to a tobacco plantation in Virginia as an indentured servant, which at the time was a convenient replacement for the gallows. There, he is reunited with Scottish noblewoman Lizzie Hallim, a childhood acquaintance struggling with the restrictions of her own privileged life. Their friendship turns to love, and in the end, they decide to finally take hold of the freedom that has eluded them throughout the years and create a life together.
Ken Follett said that he never saw this book as political, but I can’t seem to separate the political tone of the story from the satisfaction of just writing about inequality and seeking out justice. For me, Mack is an outward representation of the progressive labor sector that continues to decry the existence of repressive trade laws, of people who don’t get properly compensated for long hours of hard work, or of the hazardous conditions of most blue-collar workplaces. I am reminded of the countless faces asserting their rights to live human, and of the countless more still bound in their chains, unable to speak out and unable to break free.
It is difficult to live with the kind of choices Mack has made especially when he almost died for it, but for him, it meant his freedom, and being able to make that one shot at redemption is better than doing nothing at all to rid himself of his chains.