70 pages 2 hours read

Marc Aronson, Marina Budhos

Sugar Changed the World

Nonfiction | Book | YA | Published in 2010

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PrologueChapter Summaries & Analyses

Prologue Summary: “How We Came to Write This Book”

In the Prologue, Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos describe how they personally became interested in writing about sugar’s influence on world history. Marc learned from his family in Jerusalem how his own family was involved with sugar. Marc’s grandfather on his father’s side, Solomon, was the grand rabbi of the Ukrainian city of Kiev (which was then part of the Russian Empire). After Solomon’s family immigrated to Tel Aviv in Israel, Marc’s uncle Avram married a Russian Christian named Nina despite Solomon’s objections. Nina came from a family of Russian serfs. Her grandfather invented a way to give sparkling colors to beet sugar, making him rich enough to buy his and his family’s freedom.

Budhos’s ancestors were originally from India and immigrated to Guyana, a country in the Caribbean, to work as laborers on sugar plantations. Her grandmother had a white house in the village of Letter Kenny. Since her great-grandfather worked as a sirdar, a supervisor of field workers, he became rich. The family converted to Christianity and acclimated to Western culture. When Budhos visited Guyana, she found the house had long been torn down, and she discovered “sugar had been the entire reason for this country’s existence” (5).

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