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Sunday, March 19, 2017

Book Review: Savage Kingdom: Recommended for high school students, with a caveat, and adults | Seattle Education

Book Review: Savage Kingdom: Recommended for high school students, with a caveat, and adults | Seattle Education:

Book Review: Savage Kingdom: Recommended for high school students, with a caveat, and adults

Editor’s note: This book review was originally posted at Literary Leisure  and written by Taylor Baysinger.

jamestown
“And thy blush being turned to indignation, thou shalt wash, hast washed thy feet in the blood of those native unnatural Traitors, and now becomest a pure English Virgin; a new other Britain, in that new other World; and let all English say and pray, GOD BLESS VIRGINIA.”
Samuel Purchas, Purchas his Pilgramage (1623)
641710
Savage Kingdom: The True Story of Jamestown, 1607, and the Settlement of America
by Benjamin Woolley
★★★★☆
Four centuries ago, and fourteen years before the Mayflower, a group of men — led by a one-armed ex-pirate, an epileptic aristocrat, a reprobate cleric and a government spy — left London aboard a fleet of three ships to start a new life in America. They arrived in Virginia in the spring of 1607 and set about trying to create a settlement on a tiny island in the James River. Despite their shortcomings, and against the odds, they built Jamestown, a ramshackle outpost that laid the foundations of the British Empire and the United States of America.
Drawing on new discoveries, neglected sources and manuscript collections scattered across the world, Savage Kingdom challenges the textbook image of Jamestown as a mere money-making venture. It reveals a reckless, daring Book Review: Savage Kingdom: Recommended for high school students, with a caveat, and adults | Seattle Education: