Mother Ann Lee, Nardi Reeder Campion
Mother Ann Lee, Nardi Reeder Campion
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Mother Ann Lee
Morning Star of the Shakers

Author: Nardi Reeder Campion

Narrator: Lauren Pedersen

Unabridged: 4 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/09/2026


Synopsis

The definitive biography of the founder of the Shaker movement, whose remarkable life is the subject of a new film, The Testament of Ann Lee.This acclaimed, accessible, and thoroughly researched biography documents the life of Ann Lee, a controversial, religious leader and early feminist figure. Lee established the Shaker movement in 1770 in Manchester, England. The core principles of the Shakers were radical: in an era when wives were the possession of their husband, Lee proclaimed the equality of men and women. The Shakers were dedicated to beliefs in absolute pacifism, equality of the sexes, absolute celibacy, and the cleansing of sin through dancing and chanting to shake away the past.The Shakers sought inner peace and harmony, but their unusual beliefs, including total abstinence from sex and their exhibitions of mystical ecstasy were considered suspect and led to the imprisonment of Lee and her followers. While jailed, Lee experienced a blinding, soul-splitting vision which reaffirmed her belief in celibacy and named her the second coming of Christ. Seeking religious freedom, she led her followers, known as the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing, from England to settle in upstate New York, near Albany.Mother Ann Lee died in 1784, but her movement continued to grow into the nineteenth century with at least eighteen utopian Shaker communities in Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Ohio. Today many of those Shaker settlements are museums. The last remaining Shaker community is at Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village near Poland, Maine. The Testament of Ann Lee, starring Amanda Seyfried, drew on this book among other sources to tell Lee’s story.

About Nardi Reeder Campion

Nardi Reeder Campion (1917–2007) was the author of nine books including two memoirs, Everyday Matters: A Love Story and Over the Hill, You Pick Up Speed. Other books include Bringing Up the Brass, with Colonel Red Reeder (the basis for John Ford’s film The Long Gray Line). She wrote for publications including the New York Times Magazine, the New Yorker, Boston Globe Magazine, Life, Sports Illustrated, and Yankee. 

About Lauren Pedersen

Lauren Pedersen lends a pleasantly confident voice to fiction and nonfiction. Her many roles in life provide great range to her vocal productions. As a pharmacist educator her voice is comfortably professional with health and wellness topics. As a group fitness instructor her voice is clear and authoritative. As a mother of two her voice provides kind animation to characters, drawing listeners into discovery as each chapter unfolds. Her love for storytelling is articulated in memoirs and fiction. And her strong personal faith means she will bring life to uplifting content with Christian values.


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Quotes

“Campion has illumined Ann Lee as a formative figure in the women’s movement as well [as] evoked a strong, estimable character whose personality overcame the eccentricities of her religion in the eyes of many who encountered her.” New York Times

“Written with a feminist perspective emphasizing the radical nature of the Shakers and their leader, who proclaimed women equal to men and believed that God had a dual male/female nature.” School Library Journal