Delving into a little-known odyssey.
This engaging history tells the story of Nathaniel Isaacs (1808-1872), a British Jewish adventurer whose exploits, writes Rovner, “can be seen as a cross between an orphaned hero from a Charles Dickens novel…and a character from an H. Rider Haggard African adventure.” Isaacs was born to a merchant family in London. He traveled to the island of St. Helena, where Napoleon was in exile, to join his relatives in their commercial work. He sailed to southern Africa, where he served in the court and the armed forces of King Shaka Zulu. He worked in East Africa, building a successful business in Sierra Leone. Eventually, he fell afoul of the British administration and wound up back in England. This book relies in part on Isaacs’ memoir, rich with brilliantly limned characters, scenes of epic depravity, and moral judgments. Much of that may be made up, but Rovner, author of In the Shadow of Zion, gets behind its fantasy to excavate the complex history of race relations, colonial expansion, and Jewish identity. At the heart of the book is a story about changing notions of race and religion. Were Jews believed to be related to Africans? What role did Jews play in “the great game” of African exploitation and the slave trade? On Matakong Island, off the coast of Guinea, Isaacs tested the limits of power. He became a “culture broker, mediating between Indigenous and colonial interests.” He established his own private army. Readers watch Isaacs’ descent into slave-trading turpitude, “until finally the serpent’s egg of unrestrained power hatched within his soul, and he brutalized the bodies of those who sought little more than scraps of clothing, a bowl of rice, a morsel of meat.” Good and evil blur in this story, and Rovner’s evocative writing and scrupulous scholarship reveal a world that will be new, even to those familiar with colonial history.
A dazzling work of research, written with the flair of a novel.