
The Zorg
“A potent exposé of the ancient clash between humanity and property.”
New York Times Book Review
Finalist for the 2026 Audie Award for Best History Narration
An Amazon Best Book of the Year
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year
A Time Magazine Best Book of 2025
A New Yorker Magazine Pick of Essential Reads
Finalist for the Audie Award for Best Nonfiction Performance by Narrator
From Pulitzer finalist and New York Times bestselling author comes the account of a notorious slave ship incident that led to the abolition of slavery in the United Kingdom and sparked the US abolitionist movement. This program is read by Dion Graham, multiaward-winning narrator.
In late October 1780, a slave ship set sail from the Netherlands, bound for Africa's Windward and Gold Coasts, where it would take on its human cargo. The Zorg-a Dutch word meaning "care"-was one of thousands of such ships, but the harrowing events that ensued on its doomed journey were unique.
After reaching Africa, the Zorg was captured by a privateer and came under British command. With a new captain and crew, the ship was crammed with 442 slaves and departed in 1781 for Jamaica. But a series of unpredictable weather events and mistakes in navigation left the ship drastically off course and running out of water. So a proposition was put forth: Save the crew and the most valuable of the slaves-by throwing dozens of people, starting with women and children, overboard.
What followed was a fascinating legal drama in England's highest court that turned the brutal calculus of slavery into front-page news. The case of the Zorg catapulted the nascent anti-slavery movement from a minor evangelical cause to one of the most consequential moral campaigns in history-sparking the abolitionist movement in both England and the young United States.
Siddharth Kara utilizes primary-source research, gripping storytelling, and painstaking investigation to uncover the Zorg's journey, the lives and fates of the slaves on board, and the mysterious identity of the abolitionist who finally revealed the truth of what happened on the ship.
A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin's Press
Praise
