Quotes
“Remarkable. . . . [A] fresh and original interpretation of colonial New England [and] engagement with what are, in the end, fundamentally moral questions. The City-State of Boston is an engaging blend of small change and big ideas.” John Turner, Patheos
“An original and provocative take…Ambitious, fluid, and worldly.” Wall Street Journal
“Peterson leads us through [Boston’s] Enlightenment ideals and how they clashed with the city’s links to the American South’s slave-driven economy. A meaty, methodical exploration of a crucial American founding stronghold.” Kirkus Reviews
“An immense, fresh history of the ‘city upon a hill’ conceives of the place as an independent city-state that was absorbed into the new country that arose around it. Boston’s current moment—at once privileged and peculiar—suggests the value of considering its distinctive past in light of powerful, imaginative scholarship, in the deft hands of the author, now at Yale.” Harvard magazine
“The most detailed and entertaining history of Boston that’s been written so far.” Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor
"[A] richly detailed history.” New Yorker
“Mark Peterson’s story of the rise and fall of the city-state of Boston over nearly three centuries is a remarkable achievement. He has told the story in such a rich and extraordinary way that our understanding of Boston’s history will never again be the same.” Gordon S. Wood, Pulitzer Prize–winning historian and author of Friends Divided: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
“A daring reworking of the narrative of Boston that Americans have come to know and love, The City-State of Boston may discomfit those who cherish the story of Puritans, revolutionaries, and abolitionists as it has been told. But Mark Peterson’s rich and meticulously researched account will be indispensable reading for everyone interested in the history of North America.” Annette Gordon-Reed, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family