Quotes
“Brown retells the actual events surrounding Mary Rowlandson’s abduction
to expose the difficult role of women in colonial Puritan society,
explore Mary’s quest for freedom, and offer a fuller understanding of her
faith. She eloquently allows Mary’s story to unfold, while transporting
the reader into the rigid world of the Puritans and juxtaposing that
with the more natural life of the Native Americans. Brown’s story is as
much inspirational as it is historical, and more intriguing because it
is true.”
RT Book Reviews
“Brown’s second novel examines how the early
English settlers made their way to the New World, built their
communities, and related to the established Native American culture…Brown has written an engaging and enjoyable novel based on solid
research. Students of history…will value the authentic representation of
early Colonial America and the more sympathetic portrait of Native
Americans.”
Library Journal (starred review)
“Brown’s voice transforms a remote period into a fresh and immediate
world and, in Mary, gives us a heroine who is broken by sorrow but
determined to survive. This is a novel about the true meaning of faith
and freedom.”
Kelly O’Connor McNees, author of The Lost Summer of Louisa May Alcott
“Breathes life into a vital but oft-neglected chapter of our history. Amy
Belding Brown has turned an authentic drama of Indian captivity into a
compelling, emotionally gripping tale that is at once wrenching and
soulful.”
Eliot Pattison, author of the Mystery of Colonial America series
“A mesmerizing tale of survival and awakening…Reminded me of Caleb’s
Crossing.”
Donna Thorland, author of The Rebel Pirate