Frederick Douglass was born in 1818? (like many slaves he was unsure  of his exact date of birth) in Tuckahoe, Maryland and died on February  20, 1895, Washington D.C. As one of the main precursors of Afro-American  writing he was a self-taught scholar and a self-made man par excellence  for his time. He was the author of the "Narrative", "My Bondage and My  Freedom" and essays on slavery while his Narrative on his real life  incidents is his masterpiece. Later after his emancipation Frederick  Douglass became a social reformer, orator and statesman and the  charismatic leader of the abolitionist movement.
Like  all slave narratives Douglass' was no exception and begins with the  following lines: "I was born in Tuckahoe, near Hillsborough, and about  twelve miles from Easton, in Talbot County". The story portrays his  personal experiences, struggles and his unfortunate daily encounters  with his masters and expresses the story's hopeful message that there  would be hope in the future. In the first few chapters he gives ample  accounts of the lives of other slaves in the Great Farm House describing  in a clear engaging manner the brutality, starvation and the  dehumanization of these people under servitude. He has used these themes  to a stunning effect to illustrate and condemn the abominable practice  of slavery. Though these real life incidents were written very much  later after his emancipation they are told convincingly and emotionally  by Douglass who conveys his pathos and sympathy for his brothers under  bondage. He begins with a tableau of shocking violence, when as a young  boy he watched the whipping of his aunt by the master that reflected the  white people's sordid savagery who did not accept slaves as genuinely  human. They are also filled with extreme anger and incomprehension with  the dehumanization of the whole system and structure of slavery.
This  autobiographical account in itself is written in a language easily  readable with just eleven chapters filled with details tracing his life  as a young boy and ultimately a self emancipated adult. For the epoch it  was a daring work and is considered even today as one of the  masterpieces of this genre. The book also outlines the literary elements  of the story, which is a first-person recounting of the life of a slave  and these anecdotes were very popular with the Northern white  population who was more or less against this cruel institution. These  writings in general greatly influenced writers like Harriet Beecher  Stowe and her "Uncle Tom's Cabin". Later Mark Twain's masterpiece "Huck  Finn" with the colorful character of the fugitive slave Jim who was  directly inspired by these people who ran away from the South seeking  freedom in the North. These slave narratives were written with a certain  purpose for they were meant to depict and describe the evils of slavery  that existed in the South of the United States. They were also meant to  touch and inform certain of the Northern audience who were skeptic of  the existence of this barbarian institution.