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Hardcover I, Roger Williams: A Fragment of Autobiography Book

ISBN: 0393049051

ISBN13: 9780393049053

I, Roger Williams: A Fragment of Autobiography

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Book Overview

This narrative layers the approaching civil war in England with the emergence of a new order in Rhode Island, the first colony grounded in freedom of conscience and in the separation of church and state. Williams was a champion of the individual, but such commitment had a cruel price.

Customer Reviews

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Brings the Man and His Time to Life...

This is an incredible, beautiful and engaging novel that deserves more attention and circulation than it currently has. Ms. Settle has breathed almost cinematic life into Roger Williams, this remote character from the seemingly distant past and brings to the fore a towering figure of a man whose life's work was not only vital to the history of religious freedom, but perhaps more importantly, to civil liberties, human decency and the subsequent political movements that came to cast off the chains of monarchical power in the West. It is a highly personal story that follows the moral and ethical evolution of a man who began his career as a lowly clerk in England's high court, known then as the Star Chamber, where "justice" was meted out with a heavy hand by an arrogant and merciless gentry; where the un-landed and wretched of the earth are sentenced for the slightest infractions to be drawn and quartered, burned alive, flogged or forever imprisoned. It is here where Roger Williams' inherent sense of decency and justice begins to take root inside of him, and eventually carries him to the New World where he will create a colony founded upon principals of religious tolerance and (relatively) fairly meted out justice, void of the arrogance of royal power and arbitrary consequences. It is also a simultaneously heartbreaking and heartening tale of a man whose thoughts and ideas were somewhat ahead of their time; we feel his dissapointments and his pain as treaties between the local Indians (his allies and close friends, whose languages he spoke fluently and whose cultures he embraced) and settlers begin to unravel, leading eventually into what would come to be called The Pequot Wars, ending in bloodshed, fire and heartbreak. Even with all this, Roger Williams manages to remain steadfast in his optimism and in his inherent faith that men will one day be able to live together as brothers, in peace, each faction working together as part of the common good. His vision for the world, alas, remains to be seen, but it gives one hope.

Founding Father Ahead of His Time

If you're reading this in hopes of finding a conventional, comprehensive biography of Roger Williams, you're in the wrong place. But don't go!!! This book - more accurately, historical novel - by Mary Lee Settle goes beyond a mere recitation of biographical events. It unfolds layers of history and preconception to reveal a flesh-and-blood human being, his anger, joys, frustration, compassion, sense of justice, love of God, and even his love of a woman. This novel is a masterful achievement, and Ms. Settle has given us a most humanistic look at a man who for so long has been a historical curiosity. Roger Williams was of course the founder of Rhode Island. Until recently, that's about all I knew of him (also that a small, liberal arts college is named after him). In a perfect world, his name would be up there with Jefferson, Lincoln, and Martin Luther King. Like King, Williams was a minister of God who was attacked for preaching tolerance and civil rights. He fled to Rhode Island in the 1630s, in the dead of winter, after being banished by the Massachusetts Puritans for rejecting their version of Christianity. He took shelter with the Narragansett Indians, learned their customs and language, became a staunch defender of Indian land rights, and eventually published the first book on Native American languages. He has been called the first American radical, and his intense devotion to the ideas of individual liberty and the separation of church and state directly inspired the generation who wrought American independence a century later. Mary Lee Settle, rather than offering a conventional biography of Williams, has allowed Williams to reminisce, in his own voice, on the events of his life. We get the perspective of an elderly man who recalls with reverence his beloved mentor, Sir Edward Coke. We also bear witness to the unfathomable tyranny of 17th century England, as well as the tension and excitement of the burgeoning civil war, when Cromwell was still a brooding revolutionary. Settle examines the equivocal relationship between Williams and colonial governor John Winthrop, who remained respectful and friendly toward Williams even through bitter disagreements. Most of this book deals with Williams' experiences back in England. Only at the very end does Settle discuss (through Williams) his troubled time in Salem and new life in "Providence." I believe she does this to accentuate those experiences that were most formative in Williams' thinking, that most contributed to his fully realized conception of religious liberty. So we are able to understand WHY this stubborn, elderly man sacrificed so much for the good of this new society in America: he was intensely fearful of replicating the wrongs that occurred in the old world. So I guess what I'm trying to say is: buy this book! Settle pored over all the original writings of Williams to be able to speak in Williams' voice. Our English language has changed more than a little in 350 ye

Undiscovered Treasure

I stumbled across "I, Roger Williams" in the public library, while I was waiting for my wife to go through the check-out line. A brief glance was enough to capture my attention, even though I had heard nothing about this book. After a careful reading (sometimes with a dictionary at my side), I am ready to read it again. "I, Roger Williams" is a sublime work, weaving great insight about human relations with credible historical fiction. With a delicate touch Mary Lee Settle has written one of the finest works of fiction I have ever read. This is a book to read slowly and savor, as it sparks reflection about law and faith and tolerance, and it piques curiosity about historical detail. No other work of fiction has so artfully explored the continuity between old England and New England, or critiqued the weaknesses of our ancestors while celebrating their achievements. Mary Lee Settle breathes life into great men who have unjustly become footnotes for historians. And she paints the most joyous pictures of faithfulness in marriage and wisdom with aging that I have seen. I am deeply indebted to the author for her research, wit, grace, and maturity; and I recommend this work to all who have the patience to read a masterpiece.

I, Roger Williams: A book to get us through these times

I, Roger Williams by Mary Lee Settle, is a tour de force. A perfectly structured fictionalized autobiograpy of Roger Williams, the book makes the origins of the United States' most important freedoms, freedom of religion, belief, speech, and the separation of church and state come alive. At the same time it conveys the human side of our forefathers and the forces that shaped their thought and actions. A must read for anyone who would wish to understand and protect democracy.

A Radical Puritan Comes to America

This is a superb novel about an era of American and English history that is today often overlooked or misunderstood. But if you've read the historian Christopher Hill on the radical Puritans during the English Revolution and are interested in the connection between that world and early America - you should read this book. Mary Lee Settle has produced a beautiful novel that justly glorifies Roger Williams - an American whose love of liberty, freedom and his God lead him to live a life that should be far better known and admired than it is today. I have to agree, however, with the previous reviewer that the cover of the book should be reworked. If I didn't already have a strong interest in the radical Puritans who settled Rhode Island, I doubt that I would have given the book a second glance.
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