In *The Wordy Shipmates*, Sarah Vowell travels once again through America's past, this time to seventeenth-century New England. From the British Library to the Mohegan Sun casino, from the nation's first synagogue to a *Mayflower* waterslide, Vowell studies the Puritan effect and finds their beliefs
My Shipmate Columbus
โ Scribed by Stephen Marlowe
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 121 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
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### From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Essayist and public radio regular Vowell (\_Assassination Vacation\_) revisits America's Puritan roots in this witty exploration of the ways in which our country's present predicaments are inextricably tied to its past. In a style less colloquial than her
In this New York Times bestseller, the author of Assassination Vacation "brings the [Puritan] era wickedly to life" (Washington Post). To this day, America views itself as a Puritan nation, but Sarah Vowell investigates what that means-and what it should mean. What she discovers is something far dif
### From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Essayist and public radio regular Vowell (\_Assassination Vacation\_) revisits America's Puritan roots in this witty exploration of the ways in which our country's present predicaments are inextricably tied to its past. In a style less colloquial than her
### From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Essayist and public radio regular Vowell (\_Assassination Vacation\_) revisits America's Puritan roots in this witty exploration of the ways in which our country's present predicaments are inextricably tied to its past. In a style less colloquial than her