The Last Witchfinder
By James Morrow
(William Morrow, Hardcover, 9780060821791, 544pp.)
Publication Date: February 23, 2006
Other Editions of This Title: Paperback (February 22, 2007)
Categories: Historical - General
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From a writer who has been lauded as "an original -- stylistically ingenious, savagely funny, always unpre-dictable" ("Philadelphia Inquirer") and "unerring" ("San Diego Union-Tribune"), who has been compared to Mark Twain, Kurt Vonnegut, and John Updike, a writer whose pen has given us a devastating lampoon of the nuclear-arms race and an audacious answer to the outrageous question "What if God had a daughter?" -- from this writer, the critically acclaimed James Morrow, comes a novel of history, adventure, science, sex, satire, absurdity, and philosophy.
Jennet Stearne's father hangs witches for a living in Restoration England. But when this precocious child witnesses the horrifying death of her beloved Aunt Isobel, unjustly executed as a sorceress, she makes it her life's mission to bring down the Parliamentary Witchcraft Act. A self-educated "natural philosopher," Jennet is inspired in her quest by a single sentence in a cryptic letter from Isaac Newton: "It so happens that in the Investigations leading first to my Conjectures concerning Light and later to my System of the World, I fell upon a pretty Proof that Wicked Spirits enjoy no essential Existence." Armed with nothing but the power of reason and her memory of Isobel's love, Jennet cannot rest until she has put the last witchfinder out of business.
Abrim with picaresque adventures -- escapades that carry Jennet from King William's Britain to the fledgling American Colonies to an uncharted Caribbean island -- our heroine's search for justice entangles her variously in the machinations of the Salem Witch Court, the customs ofher Algonquin Indian captors, the designs of a West Indies pirate band, and the bedsheets of her brilliant lover, the young Ben Franklin. Finally, in a reckless and courageous ploy, Jennet arranges to go on trial herself for sorcery, the only way she can defeat the witchfinders now and forever. Rich in detail, rollicking in style, and endlessly engaging, "The Last Witchfinder" is a tour de force of historical fiction.
"An exceptionally engaging and piquantly thoughtful novel."
-Library Journal
"[An] intrepid, impeccably researched epic . . . [a] tour-de-force of early America."
-Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Morrow seamlessly weaves fantasy with science and historical fact in one of the best novels of the year."
-Rocky Mountain News
"Dazzling . . . [A]n extravagant, expansive, erudite, energetic feast of information and adventure."
-Daily Telegraph (London)
"This impeccably researched, highly ambitious novel -- nine years in the writing -- is a triumph of historical fiction."
-Booklist (starred review)
"Grim and gorgeous, earthy and erudite as well."
-Seattle Times
"Endlessly exciting ... A grand picaresque tour of England and the American colonies ... Watch out for James Morrow: He's magic."
-Washington Post Book World
"Read[s] like a collaboration between Charles Dickens and Henry Fielding...Morrow is long overdue for a mainstream audience."
-Denver Post
"A book to delight fans of writers such as John Barth and T.C. Boyle. Or even Jonathan Swift."
-USA Today
"[A] richly detailed, cerebral tale of rationality versus superstitious bigotry."
-Fort Wayne (IN) Journal Gazette
"This lively and thoughtful adventuer is filled with enough satire and plot to fuel two Mark Twain tomes."
-Pages Magazine
"Here are storytelling, showmanship and provocative book-club bait, all rolled into one inventive feat."
-New York Times











