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| The 1997 and 2005 Signet editions with Gomes's introduction |
Last week, in one of his news-and-notes emails, attorney and art collector Cleo Thomas mentioned that he and his wife Carla were engaged while in graduate school and that “our ministerial counselor there was Peter Gomes of The Memorial Church at Harvard.”
The name Peter Gomes immediately caught my attention. For the last decade and a half, likely more, I have collected editions of
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. The 1997 Signet edition of Douglass’s
Narrative includes an introduction by Gomes, and that same introduction was reprinted in the 2005 edition.
Since 1960, when Douglass’s
Narrative was reintroduced in a Harvard University Press edition edited by Benjamin Quarles, a number of prominent scholars have contributed introductions to later versions. Robert O’Meally, William Andrews, Houston Baker Jr., David Blight, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Angela Davis, and Deborah E. McDowell, among others, have all produced introductions for editions of Douglass’s text. Remembering Thomas’s note about his ministerial counselor reminded me that Gomes too belongs to that distinguished group of contributors--writers who have introduced Douglass's
Narrative.
The 1997 edition includes a biographical note that reads, “Peter J. Gomes has been a minister at the Memorial Church of Harvard University since 1974. He is the author of
The Good Book: Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart.”
The 2005 edition offers a similar note: “Peter J. Gomes has been a minister at the Memorial Church of Harvard University since 1974. He is the author of
Strength for the Journey: Biblical Wisdom for Daily Living.”
The Good Book was published in 1996, and
Strength for the Journey followed in 2003.
Gomes’s presence in these editions highlights how wide a range of thinkers has been called on to introduce Douglass’s work to various generations of readers.
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