Past and present collide in this page-turning investigation into Salem's irrepressible question: how could this have happened?
In 1692, Martha Allen Carrier was hanged in the Salem witch trials as the "Queen of Hell." Three hundred years later, her nine-times-great-granddaughter, Alice Markham-Cantor, set out to discover why Martha had died. As she chased her ancestor through the archives, graveyards, and haunted . . .
Past and present collide in this page-turning investigation into Salem's irrepressible question: how could this have happened?
In 1692, Martha Allen Carrier was hanged in the Salem witch trials as the "Queen of Hell." Three hundred years later, her nine-times-great-granddaughter, Alice Markham-Cantor, set out to discover why Martha had died. As she chased her ancestor through the archives, graveyards, and haunted places of New England, grappling with what we owe the past, Alice discovered a shocking truth: witch hunts didn't end in Salem.
Extensively researched and told through alternating fiction and non-fiction chapters, The Once & Future Witch Hunt does not treat Salem as a cautionary tale. It treats Salem as an instruction manual—not on how to perform witch hunts, but how to stop them.
Foreword by Rebecca Traister, New York Times bestselling author.
Afterword by Silvia Federici, author of Caliban and the Witch.
"As you might guess from the title, this deeply researched book expands beyond the Salem witch trials into the modern witch hunts that take place today. The story fits within two genres, alternating chapter by chapter between historical fiction (Markham-Cantor's telling of Carrier's story) and narrative nonfiction, in which she outlines her research process."?
—The Cut
"This is the most vivid and . . .
"As you might guess from the title, this deeply researched book expands beyond the Salem witch trials into the modern witch hunts that take place today. The story fits within two genres, alternating chapter by chapter between historical fiction (Markham-Cantor's telling of Carrier's story) and narrative nonfiction, in which she outlines her research process."?
—The Cut
"This is the most vivid and accessible introduction to the world's most notorious witch trials that a newcomer is likely to find, and also a very timely warning for the present."
—Ronald Hutton, author of The Witch: A History of Fear, from Ancient Times to the Present
"In this fascinating and powerful look at the story of one family caught up in the Salem witch trials, Alice Markham-Cantor performs a kind of literary magic, blending fact and fiction into a form perfectly suited to the troubling subject matter and the limits of the historical record. The exact truth of what happened to her ancestor Martha Carrier will never be known, but thanks to this indelible book, readers can imagine Martha's life and, alas, her death."
—Ann Packer, author of The Children's Crusade
"Through lively characters and fast-paced storytelling, Markham-Cantor transports us directly into the world of the Salem witch trials. The Once & Future Witch Hunt clearly shows that there is nothing exceptional about the conditions in which witch hunts arise. Rather, we see how the urge to blame, scapegoat, and other is all too typically human."
—Miranda Forsyth, director of the International Network Against Accusations of Witchcraft and Associated Harmful Practices
"Alice Markham-Cantor has done a remarkable thing here. From the sparest bones of ancestor's story, she has fashioned a thoroughly engaging work of scholarship that is equal parts historical fiction, personal narrative, feminist theory, and a good old-fashioned detective yarn. In The Once & Future Witch Hunt, Markham-Cantor rescues Martha Carrier from one of the darkest corners of our nation's past. Her voice, and Markham-Cantor's too, will linger in your memory long after you've turned the final page."
—Alexandra Styron, author of Reading My Father
"Once started, I could not put this book down. The author's remote ancestor becomes a real person, whose death by hanging was provoked by neighbours' claims of her witchcraft, encouraged by religious leaders. The modern cases listed show such beliefs occurring world-wide and generating similar responses."
—Jean La Fontaine, author of Witches and Demons: A Comparative Perspective on Witchcraft and Satanism
"A scholarly and also magical interweaving of two stories, two historical periods, and two women's sensibilities: of the author, delving deep into the history of Salem and her own distant ancestor; and of that person, Martha Carrier....Through fictional recreations, Markham-Cantor brings to vivid life a sharp and independent woman, and how a community rallied around a crescendo of false accusations of her and others; and in passages detailing her own research journey, the author sets the destructive misogyny of that time in the wider context of witch trials before and since, in the United States and elsewhere. A compelling, eye-opening, and chilling read."
—Sylvia Brownrigg, author of The Whole Staggering Mystery
ISBN-13: | 9780738776279 |
Imprint: | Llewellyn |
Pub Date: | May 2024 |
Product Type: | Trade Paperback |
Page Count: | 344 pages |
Size: | 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.81 IN |
Weight: | 1.00 lbs |
Case Quantity: | 36 |