
She applied the “Page 99 Test to her latest book, The Two Princes of Mpfumo: An Early Eighteenth-Century Journey into and out of Slavery, and reported the following:
The last full sentence on page 99 alludes to the tragedy at the heart of this book. It states “When the men arrived in Exmouth, Prince James was already persona non grata, and during their stay nothing altered.” Three pages later Prince James will be dead by his own hand. We will never know exactly why he made this choice.Learn more about The Two Princes of Mpfumo at the University of Pennsylvania Press website.
The suicide of Prince James also catches us by surprise. Much of the text shows us two African princes who were savvy survivors who pushed and prodded to make their way home. Prince James and his brother John had left their homeland of Mpfumo, where the capital of Mozambique now stands, on an English ship in 1716 to help raise the status of their kingdom by establishing trading ties with the English. They were enslaved, but they managed to free themselves and make their way to London. There they were minor celebrities and there they managed to convince the English to take them home. When their ship home hit a storm and went into port for repairs in Exmouth, it seemed like it would be a short setback on a triumphal journey home.
In fact, most of page 99 is about connections between people, rather than ruptures. It details how the institutions that supported the princes used their networks to help the men and support their voyage home. Men were found to repair the ship and to show the princes the sites of the city. In fact, even the dark story of Prince James’ suicide has moments of hope. Two pages later, in the midst of his crisis, he went door to door in Exmouth looking for someone to let him in, but it was nearing midnight and no one was awake. If he had knocked a few hours earlier, perhaps things would have ended differently. But the reality of the suffering these men faced, the ever present taint of racism, always lurks in the background of their story. So it is fitting the page ends this way and, as a whole, contains both the light and the dark side of the princes’ tale.
--Marshal Zeringue