
He applied the “Page 99 Test” to his new book, Entangled Alliances: Racialized Freedom and Atlantic Diplomacy During the American Revolution, and shared the following:
When opening to page 99, the reader enters the book mid-sentence, encountering a discussion of the petition from Felix. “…the cruelties of enslavement and white supremacist attitudes. He then summarized the condition of Black life plainly: “We have no Property. We have no Wives. No Children. We have no City. No Country.” In 1773, Felix, a Black Bostonian, like White American rebels in that day, submitted his grievances in writing to Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson and the House of Representatives. Felix’s call for the end of slavery during the American Revolution represents the first public, Black-authored antislavery petition to the Massachusetts legislature—and perhaps the first in American history.Learn more about Entangled Alliances at the Cornell University Press website.
A reader opening to page 99 gets a good sense of the book. There, the reader engages themes discussed throughout the book. Some are Black and White American patriots, the importance of early newspapers, the power of citizens in an American democracy to critique government leaders, the search for justice in courts, and the US’s interconnectedness with people across the world.
One sentence captures an important theme: “The revolutionary period created a sense of optimism that Felix exhibited in his petition.” The American Revolution did not solve the problems in the United States. The revolutionary moment gave people hope that problems could be solved. The sharing of news about liberties being won across the Atlantic world encouraged prominent White American men to push for independence, White American women to advocate for greater rights, free Black people to seek enfranchisement, and enslaved Africans to demand freedom.
An important part of the book is absent on page 99. This book illuminates the strong ties between the US and the French Caribbean colony Saint-Domingue (later Haiti) during the American Revolution. It would be a shame for readers to miss narratives about the Dominguan rebel Jacques Delaunay, the justice seeker Marie-Jeanne Carenan, and the future Haitian Revolution leader Toussaint Louverture.
Another sentence is instructive: “Felix submitted his petition in the hope that enslaved people could join their white neighbors in the enjoyment of articulated rights for all humankind.” The American Revolution stoked the desire for freedom and equality that lived within the hearts of Atlantic world inhabitants. In 2026, the year the US celebrates its 250th anniversary, the desire for freedom and equality lives on. That never-ending search is the inheritance—from the Founding Generation—to all citizens and immigrants who love, labor, and sacrifice to help the United States live up to the truly revolutionary ideal “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.”
--Marshal Zeringue









