STORIES OF RAINBOW AND LUCKY, volume 4: Selling Lucky, by Jacob Abbott [NY: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1860]
-----
[frontispiece]
[To "Nineteenth-Century American Children & What They Read"]
Fourteen-year-old Rainbow was one of the few African-American characters created by Jacob Abbott; intelligent and hard-working, he nevertheless suffers the casual racism of antebellum Northerners. The five books about Rainbow tell a complete story, as Rainbow is hired by a white teenager named Handie Level, to help him on a farm Handie has inherited.
Selling Lucky (1860) details Rainbow's adventures in the world outside his family and friends, as he takes Lucky from Southerton to Boston, in order to sell him. During a suspenseful trip, Rainbow must outwit thieves and counterfeiters--and, occasionally, Lucky. He acquits himself admirably. In this work, Abbott deals more overtly with racism, with strangers making racist remarks to Rainbow, and with mention of where he will be allowed to sit during a train trip. Selling Lucky features Abbott's trademark detailed explanations of nearly everything, from figuring the cost of renting vs. owning to the work-a-day life of a railroad brakeman. It is, however, an excellent read.
STORIES OF RAINBOW AND LUCKY, volume 4: Selling Lucky, by Jacob Abbott [NY: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1860]
-----
[frontispiece]