000074959 000__ 01221cam\a2200241\\\4500 000074959 001__ 74959 000074959 005__ 20220914143905.0 000074959 008__ 730816s1964\\\\nyu\\\\j\\\\\\00011\eng\\ 000074959 010__ $$a64-020691 000074959 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocm00301846 000074959 035__ $$a74959 000074959 040__ $$aDLC$$cDLC$$dm.c.$$dIEP 000074959 049__ $$aISEA 000074959 0500_ $$aPZ7.P4473$$bTi 000074959 1001_ $$aPetry, Ann,$$d1908-1997. 000074959 24510 $$aTituba of Salem Village /$$cby Ann Petry. 000074959 260__ $$aNew York :$$bCrowell,$$cc1964. 000074959 300__ $$a254 p. ;$$c21 cm. 000074959 520__ $$aTells how Tituba, a slave, was sold in Barbados to a preacher bound for Boston and became one of three women convicted at the beginning of the Salem witch trials. The story of the slave Tituba and her husband, John Indian, from the day they were sold in Barbados until the tragic Salem witchcraft trials. In the Salem Village of 1692, superstition and hysteria peaked with the Salem witch trials. One of the first three "witches" condemned is Tituba, a slave from Barbados. "This restrained but dramatic narrative ... brings to life not only Tituba but also those around her, and shows how suspicion against her culminated in her arrest and trial." 000074959 60001 $$aTituba$$vFiction. 000074959 650_1 $$aWitchcraft$$zMassachusetts$$zSalem$$vFiction. 000074959 651_1 $$aSalem (Mass.)$$xHistory$$yColonial period$$vFiction. 000074959 85200 $$bya$$hPZ7.P4473$$iTi 000074959 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:74959$$pGLOBAL_SET 000074959 980__ $$aBIB 000074959 980__ $$aBOOK