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Overview
Martha Carrier was one of the first women to be accused, tried and hanged as a witch in Salem, Massachusetts. Like her mother, young Sarah Carrier is bright and willful, openly challenging the small, brutal world in which they live. Often at odds with one another, mother and daughter are forced to stand together against the escalating hysteria of the trials and the superstitious tyranny that led to the torture and imprisonment of more than 200 people accused of witchcraft. This is the story of Martha's courageous defiance and ultimate death, as told by the daughter who survived.
Kathleen Kent is a tenth generation descendent of Martha Carrier. She paints a haunting portrait, not just of Puritan New England, but also of one family's deep and abiding love in the face of fear and persecution.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9780316024488
- ISBN-10: 0316024481
- Publisher: Little Brown and Company
- Publish Date: September 2008
- Dimensions: 9.56 x 6.34 x 1.14 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.24 pounds
- Page Count: 354
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Caught in the madness of Salem, 1692
Even now, no one really knows what caused the atrocities known as the Salem Witch Trials. In 1692, more than 150 peoplemostly womenwere arrested and accused of witchery. Historians have blamed everything from Puritan misogyny, to landlust, to ergot poisoning from a fungus that grows on rye and can cause psychosis. Kathleen Kent's debut, The Heretic's Daughter, a novelization of a true event, tells the story of one family caught up in the madness.
The Carriers are not like other Puritan families. The patriarch, Thomas, is over seven feet tall. His much younger wife, Martha, is difficult and sharp tongued, and no one knows this more than her daughter Sarah, the book's narrator. Their lives are somber, their days dominated by backbreaking work. The family members are, perhaps, not as kind to each other as they could be. Dangers are everywhere, from murderous raids by Indians whose land is being encroached upon, to illnesses and calamities that know no remedy. When we first meet the Carriers, they're making their way, in the middle of another hard winter, from the town of Billerica in the Massachusetts Bay Colony to the neighboring town of Andover. They believe they're outrunning the smallpox. They're not. And this is where the trouble begins.
Kent recounts the townspeople's case against Goodwife Carrier, incident by small incident. Her family brought the smallpox, she bewitched a fire so that it blew onto someone else's land and not hers, her insolent tongue caused livestock to sicken and die. Tellingly, there's a beef between her husband and brother-in-law, and her nephew wants her property. Soon Martha is arrested and brought 17 miles to Salem, where she's accused by that lovely bunch of girls from The Crucible.
A descendent of the Carriers, Kent relates the story quietly, with moments of beauty that give way to horror, then to redemption. The Heretic's Daughter not only chronicles the insanity of the witch trials, but a family learningmaybe too lateto truly value each other.
Arlene McKanic writes from South Carolina.
Caught in the madness of Salem, 1692
Even now, no one really knows what caused the atrocities known as the Salem Witch Trials. In 1692, more than 150 peoplemostly womenwere arrested and accused of witchery. Historians have blamed everything from Puritan misogyny, to landlust, to ergot poisoning from a fungus that grows on rye and can cause psychosis. Kathleen Kent's debut, The Heretic's Daughter, a novelization of a true event, tells the story of one family caught up in the madness.
The Carriers are not like other Puritan families. The patriarch, Thomas, is over seven feet tall. His much younger wife, Martha, is difficult and sharp tongued, and no one knows this more than her daughter Sarah, the book's narrator. Their lives are somber, their days dominated by backbreaking work. The family members are, perhaps, not as kind to each other as they could be. Dangers are everywhere, from murderous raids by Indians whose land is being encroached upon, to illnesses and calamities that know no remedy. When we first meet the Carriers, they're making their way, in the middle of another hard winter, from the town of Billerica in the Massachusetts Bay Colony to the neighboring town of Andover. They believe they're outrunning the smallpox. They're not. And this is where the trouble begins.
Kent recounts the townspeople's case against Goodwife Carrier, incident by small incident. Her family brought the smallpox, she bewitched a fire so that it blew onto someone else's land and not hers, her insolent tongue caused livestock to sicken and die. Tellingly, there's a beef between her husband and brother-in-law, and her nephew wants her property. Soon Martha is arrested and brought 17 miles to Salem, where she's accused by that lovely bunch of girls from The Crucible.
A descendent of the Carriers, Kent relates the story quietly, with moments of beauty that give way to horror, then to redemption. The Heretic's Daughter not only chronicles the insanity of the witch trials, but a family learningmaybe too lateto truly value each other.
Arlene McKanic writes from South Carolina.