The Black Schooner

Rebellion on the Amistad, A Graphic Novel

Illustrated by David Lester
Edited by Paul Buhle
Contributions by Paul Buhle
Paperback
$18.95 US
On sale Jun 09, 2026 | 130 Pages | 9780807016909

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A stunning graphic history of how enslaved Africans on board the Amistad rebelled and captured the slave ship in 1839, challenging a whitewashed version of history and putting the Africans back at the center of their own freedom story

From the trio of Rediker, Lester, and Buhle comes another graphic “history from below” about the Amistad rebellion of 1839 when 53 enslaved Africans on the slave ship Amistad slipped out of their restraints and overpowered their enslavers and ship’s crew. Sold into slavery in their homeland of Sierra Leone and later bound for Puerto Príncipe, Cuba, from Havana, these Africans, led by the charismatic warrior Cinqué, forced the ship’s remaining crew to sail homeward.

Divided into three parts, The Black Schooner begins with the intense night of the uprising and takes readers on a reconstructed journey: from sailing on the open ocean to a New Haven, Connecticut, jail, where the captured Africans awaited trial for mutiny and murder; to the Supreme courtroom that found that the rebels had been illegally enslaved and would now be free to return to their native land. Through it all, artist David Lester chronicles their story using striking imagery, showing how they achieved an unexpected and powerful international victory for the abolitionist movement and forced some of the most powerful people in the world to confront the issue of human bondage.

Based on Rediker’s book The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom, The Black Schooner challenges a whitewashed history and instead, puts the Africans back at the center of their own freedom story--where they belong.
Paul Buhle, David Lester, and Marcus Rediker have collaborated on three previous graphic novels, all published by Beacon Press: Prophet Against Slavery: Benjamin Lay (2021); Under the Banner of King Death: Pirates of the Atlantic (2023); and Revolution by Fire: New York’s Afro-Irish Uprising of 1741 (2024)

Paul Buhle, retired Senior Lecturer at Brown University, is the authorized biographer of

Pan African giant C .L.R. James and radical historian William Appleman Williams. Since

2005 he has edited more than a dozen nonfiction graphic novels, including Studs Terkel’s

Working (an adaptation of the totemic oral history), A Peoples History of the American

Empire (an adaptation of Zinn), The Beats, and Red Rosa (Luxemburg). He lives in

Providence, Rhode Island.

David Lester illustrated the award-winning 1919: A Graphic History of the Winnipeg

General Strike (published in English, German and French editions). His poster of anti-war

protester Malachi Ritscher was exhibited at The Whitney Museum of American Art in New

York. Forthcoming in 2025, Lester has a chapter in the anthology Partisans: A Graphic History of Anti-fascist Resistance (Between The Lines), edited by Paul Buhle and Raymond Tyler. He lives in Vancouver, Canada.

Marcus Rediker is Distinguished Professor of Atlantic History at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of numerous prize-winning books that have been translated into nineteen languages worldwide. He worked with director Tony Buba to make the documentary film Ghosts of Amistad, about the memory of the Amistad Rebellion of 1839 in Sierra Leone. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

About

A stunning graphic history of how enslaved Africans on board the Amistad rebelled and captured the slave ship in 1839, challenging a whitewashed version of history and putting the Africans back at the center of their own freedom story

From the trio of Rediker, Lester, and Buhle comes another graphic “history from below” about the Amistad rebellion of 1839 when 53 enslaved Africans on the slave ship Amistad slipped out of their restraints and overpowered their enslavers and ship’s crew. Sold into slavery in their homeland of Sierra Leone and later bound for Puerto Príncipe, Cuba, from Havana, these Africans, led by the charismatic warrior Cinqué, forced the ship’s remaining crew to sail homeward.

Divided into three parts, The Black Schooner begins with the intense night of the uprising and takes readers on a reconstructed journey: from sailing on the open ocean to a New Haven, Connecticut, jail, where the captured Africans awaited trial for mutiny and murder; to the Supreme courtroom that found that the rebels had been illegally enslaved and would now be free to return to their native land. Through it all, artist David Lester chronicles their story using striking imagery, showing how they achieved an unexpected and powerful international victory for the abolitionist movement and forced some of the most powerful people in the world to confront the issue of human bondage.

Based on Rediker’s book The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom, The Black Schooner challenges a whitewashed history and instead, puts the Africans back at the center of their own freedom story--where they belong.

Author

Paul Buhle, David Lester, and Marcus Rediker have collaborated on three previous graphic novels, all published by Beacon Press: Prophet Against Slavery: Benjamin Lay (2021); Under the Banner of King Death: Pirates of the Atlantic (2023); and Revolution by Fire: New York’s Afro-Irish Uprising of 1741 (2024)

Paul Buhle, retired Senior Lecturer at Brown University, is the authorized biographer of

Pan African giant C .L.R. James and radical historian William Appleman Williams. Since

2005 he has edited more than a dozen nonfiction graphic novels, including Studs Terkel’s

Working (an adaptation of the totemic oral history), A Peoples History of the American

Empire (an adaptation of Zinn), The Beats, and Red Rosa (Luxemburg). He lives in

Providence, Rhode Island.

David Lester illustrated the award-winning 1919: A Graphic History of the Winnipeg

General Strike (published in English, German and French editions). His poster of anti-war

protester Malachi Ritscher was exhibited at The Whitney Museum of American Art in New

York. Forthcoming in 2025, Lester has a chapter in the anthology Partisans: A Graphic History of Anti-fascist Resistance (Between The Lines), edited by Paul Buhle and Raymond Tyler. He lives in Vancouver, Canada.

Marcus Rediker is Distinguished Professor of Atlantic History at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of numerous prize-winning books that have been translated into nineteen languages worldwide. He worked with director Tony Buba to make the documentary film Ghosts of Amistad, about the memory of the Amistad Rebellion of 1839 in Sierra Leone. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.