Amazon.com
May 23, 1939. Television was being advertised for the first time to American consumers. Europe was on the brink of war as Hitler and Mussolini signed an alliance in Berlin. These were the days before sonar and before the discovery of nuclear power revolutionized submarine design. Dependent on battery power, submarines were actually surface ships that "occasionally dipped beneath the waves." If a sub went down, "every man on board was doomed. It was accepted that there would be no deliverance."
Swede Momsen was, according to master storyteller Peter Maas, the "greatest submariner the Navy ever had," and he was determined to beat those odds. Momsen spent his career trying to save the lives of trapped submariners, despite an indifferent Navy bureaucracy that thwarted and belittled his efforts at every turn. Every way of saving a sailor entombed in a sub--"smoke bombs, telephone marker buoys, new deep-sea diving techniques, escape hatches, artificial lungs, a great pear-shaped rescue chamber--was either a direct result of Momsen's inventive derring-do, or of value only because of it." Yet on the day the Squalus sank, none of Momsen's inventions had been used in an actual submarine disaster.
In The Terrible Hours, Maas reconstructs the harrowing 39 hours between the disappearance of the submarine Squalus during a test dive off the New England coast and the eventual rescue of 33 crew members trapped in the vessel 250 feet beneath the sea. It's also the story of Momsen's triumph. Under the worst possible circumstances, Momsen led a successful mission and helped change the future of undersea lifesaving. Not only has Maas written a carefully researched and suspenseful tribute to a true hero, in the process he has salvaged a long-forgotten, riveting piece of American history. --Svenja Soldovieri
Amazon.com Audiobook Review
Like a tough old salt holding forth in a dockside pub, Kevin Conway narrates this riveting maritime drama in a raspy voice well-weathered by sea spray and Lucky Strikes. Chronicling the true story of 33 American sailors trapped aboard a sunken submarine just prior to World War II, author Peter Maas uncovered the unsung hero behind their attempted rescue, Navy officer Charles "Swede" Momsen. A deep sea visionary, Momsen's unorthodox theories and unproven inventions represented the lost men's only hope. "For someone whose formal education had shaped him for duty as a line officer in the US Navy, Momsen was getting into pretty deep water." Conway does an excellent job of portraying the various crew members without turning character into caricature and knots the nerve-wracking, claustrophobic tension of this ill-fated mission in the back of your throat. (Running time: 6 hours, 4 cassettes) --George Laney
Book Description
On the eve of World War II, America's newest submarine plunged helplessly to the North Atlantic bottom during a test dive. Miraculously, thirty-three crew members still survived. While their wives and girlfriends waited in nearly unbearable tension on shore, their ultimate fate would depend on one man.
In this thrilling true narrative of terror, heroism and courage in the depths of a malevolent ocean, prizewinning author Peter Maas brings us in vivid detail a blow-by-blow account of the disaster and its uncertain outcome. The sub was the Squalus. The man was a U.S. Navy officer, Charles "Swede" Momsen, an extraordinary combination of visionary, scientist and man of action. Until his advent, it was accepted that if a submarine went down, her crew was doomed. But Momsen, in the face of an indifferent, often sneering naval bureaucracy, battling red tape and disbelieving naysayers every step of the way, risked his own life again and again against the unknown in his efforts to invent and pioneer every escape and rescue device, every deep-sea diving technique, to save an entombed crew. With the crippled, partially flooded Squalus lost on the North Atlantic floor, Momsen faced his personal moment of truth: Could he actually pluck those men from a watery grave? Had all his work been in vain?
The legacy of his death-defying probes into our inner space remains with us today, and in this depiction of the perseverance and triumph of the human spirit, Swede Momsen is given his rightful place in the pantheon of true American heroes.
Customer Reviews:
Diver's Story.......2007-05-23
I have been a (US Navy qualified) diver since 1958. Momsen has been a household name for years but I had never heard his story. This book filled that gap. Great story, well told.
I suspect most anyone would find this a good read but divers will find it facinating.
Another Great American Story.......2007-03-29
The story if Charles "Swede" Momsen is another one of those that few people know of, but should. This book is really more about the life of Momsen and not just the rescue of the Squalus. Though it was one of the crowning achievments of his extraordinary life, and perhaps his proudest moment, the rescue of the Squalus started well over a decade before the ship was even built. Momsens tenacity in developing diving, and submarine rescue devices for years before the sinking is what made the rescue possible at all. The Terrible Hours does an excellent job at informing you of the history of the development of the tools and techniques that were used by Momsen and his crew to rescue the 33 survivors of the doomed (without Momsen) sub.
Not given near the coverage of Squalus rescue, but propbably an achievment that saved much more than 33 lives, was Momsen's work on torpedo exploders and submarine attack techniques that had to have saved hundreds or thousands of American lives in WWII.
The book is an excellent read and I highly recommended to fans of submarines, diving, and rescue. If those things don't interest you, the humanity of the story will.
20th Century Benjamin Franklin: Charles "Swede" Momsen.......2007-02-26
May 22, 1939, merely a few months before Germany invaded Poland and the world decried the clarions of war, a submarine named Squalus (pronounced `skwaylus') sunk onto the Atlantic floor during a test dive with 58 crew members on board. 33 people survived and waited in darkness and silence, save for the hammering of morse code to let whoever might be on the surface know that they are alive. Peter Maas tells the story of these terrible hours as only a master storyteller can with such great wielding of the language that everything seems to come alive, the people, the vessels, the ocean. Even the cantankerous pontoons make the central character of the story Charles "Swede" Momsen look like Ahab.
If you think of the ratio between the length of the submarine and the depth of Ocean it sunk under was like walking in the swimming pool with water coming up to your chest. But if humans had left the submarine, it would look like ants trying to crawl up from your toes. Humans aren't nearly as lucky as ants in such circumstance due to the nature of our respiratory systems, as well as the chemicals that sustain are being. They all go haywire, so we learn from Maas, and most likely die. Unless we have help from people like Momsen and live.
I picked up Maas' book primarily because the awe and respect it kept mentioning toward a single person, Momsen, in its back cover (how's that for judging the book? ;) and of course because of all the favorable reviews in Amazon on its behalf. Being a student of people I wanted to know more about Momsen and I was not disappointed with his character and everything he did so well: He saved lives. He saved lives while constantly fighting off bureaucratic intransigence. He is one of those few people you meet in life who seem to do well anything they work on; one of those few people you can depend on. These people are not without failure but with abundant perseverance: Learning to overcome failure with an open mind and science, which opens the mind--success awaits to achieve whatever goal. This has been the main theme of all great people of the past, present, and the future.
To have a little bit more appreciation for Momsen's work, I learned that Germany lost 1000 lives (peace and war time combined) in submarines since 1774. In contrast, the United States lost 75 sailors. After having read Maas' book I can safely say this is largely due to Momsen because the number one reason for submarine accidents is due to poor design. Incidentally Squalus's sinking was precisely due to the design of levers and their placement. The very nature of this problem is not far off from modern software problems with poor GUI design. And Momsen's single greatest reason for success was testing, testing, and more testing.
You may ask why I related Momsen to Franklin in my title. Because aside from the scientific, military, political acumen this great man had, he even fixed the Navy's postal service.
" Reading 'Terrible Hours' are hours well spent".......2007-01-29
This is the story of the rescue of The Squallus in 1939, near NH. I of course have heard of the Squallus, and though I worked at Bupers for almost 10 year, I had never heard of "Swede" Momsen, who headed up the rescue. This is compelling reading. My Aunt felt this book was better than the "Perfect Storm" (At least the ending was happier). This is very compelling reading.
Gripping story of rescue at sea.......2006-09-03
This superb thriller keeps readers on the edge. In May of 1939 an accident left U.S. navy submarine "Squalus" sunk and disabled on the ocean floor 250 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crew had less than two days of oxygen remaining, and would perish unless the navy could somehow perform a daring rescue. Enter career naval officer Swede Momson, an inventor whose rescue devices - diving bell, mixed gas deep-water breathing equipment - had never been fully tried out due to intransigence from the navy brass. This is the story of Momson's rescue devices and their use as the navy attempted to save the crew members of the Squalus, and a mini-biography of Momson as well. Author Peter Maas writes superbly with a tense and readable style that describes this harrowing race against time.
Book Description
Following the death of her husband, a middle-aged Englishwoman travels through Europe to escape loneliness and boredom. One evening during her stay at the French Riviera, while enjoying the atmosphere of the Monte Carlo Casino, she becomes mesmerized by the obsessive gambling of a young Polish aristocrat. This fateful encounter leads to passion, despair and death, changing both their lives forever.
Stefan Zweig-novelist, librettist, poet, translator and biographer-was born in 1881, a member of a wealthy Austrian-Jewish family. He was educated in Berlin and Vienna. His stories and novellas were collected in 1934 when, faced with the rise of the Nazis he moved to London, taking British citizenship, before settling in Brazil, where, in 1942, he and his wife were found dead in bed.
Customer Reviews:
A gambler.......2005-04-15
This story is Stefan Zweig's version of 'The Gambler'. Although it doesn't rival Dostoyevsky's portrait, it is certainly a very worth-while read.
A woman falls under the spell of a gambler who lost his fortune and is on the verge of committing suicide. She tries desperately to save him.
This is an impressive short novel, because of the strong emerging feelings which erupt like volcanoes and leave the main characters totally upset. The endgame and the end are stunning.
It is one of Stefan Zweig's most successful short novels, although he is handicapped by the comparison with Dostoyevsky.
What a woman can do in 24 hours..........2004-04-22
In this framed narrative Stefan Zweig explores the sudden impulse that makes a woman toss her respectability, peace of mind and a good lump of money out of the window. Compulsion, obsession and impulses are important themes in Zweig's works and you'll find plenty of it in this small and powerful book. If you ever felt the tug of passion (some may call it life) dragging you away to the ocean you'll adore this book. I certainly did.
A Little Gem of a Novel.......2003-09-13
Perhaps not as psychologically compelling and taut as some of Zweig's other work, this novella is still worth reading for it's fine writing. At a hotel in Monte Carlo in the days after World War I, a group of wealthy travelers are shocked to learn that a married woman of their set has suddenly left her husband and family on the arms of a seducer whom she has known less then twenty-four hours. Each guest chimes in with their opinion of the woman's extraordinary behavior. Our narrator expresses his understanding of the woman's actions while the others vehemently condemn the lady. Suddenly he finds himself the confidante of an older woman who is in the group. She tells him the tale of how twenty years earlier she too had been drawn to an intense younger man who she observed in the casino one evening. Zweig explores the motivations and the ramifications of a sudden act of passion.
Product Description
10 LUANNE RICE Books : 1) Crazy in Love / 2) Dream Country/ 3) Follow the Stars Home / 4) Silver Bells / 5) Dance with Me / 6) Safe Harbor, True Blue 7) Summer Light / 8) The Secret Hour / 9) The Perfect Summer 10) Angels All over Town (Unboxed Set of Contemporary Books), Shipped in one
package to save on shipping costs.
Product Description
9 Titles By Rice - Cloud Nine - Silver Bells - Dance with Me - Crazy in Love - Blue Moon - Secret Hour - Follow the Stars Home - Summer's Child - Summer of Roses
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The Hour of the Bell
Harry Mark Petrakis
Manufacturer: Backinprint.com
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0595194982 |
Book Description
Set in 1820 and 1821, The Hour of the Bell recreates the beginnings of the Greek War of Independence after 400 years of slavery under the Turkish Empire. From the raids of mountain guerillas, to the great sea battles of small island fleets, to the savage siege and butcher at Tripolitza, all come vividly alive in this great historical adventure.
Customer Reviews:
The Hour of the Bell.......2002-08-26
This book deals with the Greek War of Independance of 1821. What set this book apart is that although it deals with a historical account, the author Harry Mark Petrakis, gives life to the fabled warriors of the independance War. It really made an impression on me, because, when one reads a history book, all one is doing is basically reading an event that happened, and being re-told. This book, re-tells the event, but puts you in the front seat, you live and breath amongst the heroes, and are thrown in the heat of the battle, and the bitter sweet defeat. Overall, although fictitional with what transpired during these events, it was great to be part of the book.
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The hours between;: Poems
Nina Stewart Bell
Manufacturer: New Method Printing Co
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
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ASIN: B00089U1MK |
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Mrs Dalloway (Quality Paperback Edition)
Virginia Wolf
Manufacturer: Quality Paperback Book Club
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ASIN: B000SZM84S |
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This edition has a forward of eight pages by Maureen Howard. As Clarissa Dalloway walks through London on a fine June morning, a sky-writing plane captures her attention. Crowds stare upwards to decipher the message while the plane turns and loops, leaving off one letter, picking up another. Like the airplane's swooping path, Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway follows Clarissa and those whose lives brush hers--from Peter Walsh, whom she spurned years ago, to her daughter Elizabeth, the girl's angry teacher, Doris Kilman, and war-shocked Septimus Warren Smith, who is sinking into madness.
As Mrs. Dalloway prepares for the party she is giving that evening, a series of events intrudes on her composure. Her husband is invited, without her, to lunch with Lady Bruton (who, Clarissa notes anxiously, gives the most amusing luncheons). Meanwhile, Peter Walsh appears, recently from India, to criticize and confide in her. His sudden arrival evokes memories of a distant past, the choices she made then, and her wistful friendship with Sally Seton.
Woolf then explores the relationships between women and men, and between women, as Clarissa muses, "It was something central which permeated; something warm which broke up surfaces and rippled the cold contact of man and woman, or of women together.... Her relation in the old days with Sally Seton. Had not that, after all, been love?" While Clarissa is transported to past afternoons with Sally, and as she sits mending her green dress, Warren Smith catapults desperately into his delusions. Although his troubles form a tangent to Clarissa's web, they undeniably touch it, and the strands connecting all these characters draw tighter as evening deepens. As she immerses us in each inner life, Virginia Woolf offers exquisite, painful images of the past bleeding into the present, of desire overwhelmed by society's demands. --Joannie Kervran Stangeland
Customer Reviews:
Rather Disappointing...........2007-03-21
I originally ordered this book online bcs. I loved reading "The Diamond Girl"(another book by DP) & thought this book'd be similarly good since it had a similar title, but I've regretted this decision bitter ever since I've received & read it.... (This one wasn't even half as emotional-gripping/sensual as "The Diamond Girl"....)
Just ok..........2007-03-04
This story was ok. It really isnt anything special. This is going to be an opinion from someone whos read over 30 books from Diana Palmer.
If like me, you have read various books by this author, you'll see that this is absolutely nothing new. Diana Palmer is very repetitive in her plots. However, in some stories, her characters are so magnificient that you like it. But, this was not the case.
Story is about a young woman (Kit) who is completely in love with Matt. She has gotten a job offer in New York that she cant refuse. The problem is, Matt is beginning to see Kit in a new way. He starts courting her and doing everything possible so that she can change her mind and not go to New York.
I didnt like the characters in this story. Sure, Kit is a sweet girl who had ambitions. However, shes so contradicting. She supposedly loves Matt, yet she refuses to express her real feelings in most instances. She is also very mindfully passionate but she freaks out at physical contact. Matt on the other hand is dull. He also doesnt express his feelings. Everything about their relationship is physical, and not even mediocre physicality at that.
The ending is bad. It is so abrupt. Nothing special and very predictable.
Overall, if youre a fan of Palmer you'll probably like it because her stories are good but very much the same. If you are barely getting into her stories, i recommend it because this is the way most of her stories are. Good book, but the characters werent great.
Pretty good.......2005-05-30
This was well on its way to being a 5-star book for me until the end. Spoilers follow, so don't read on if you don't want to know...anyway, the chemistry between Kit and Matt was smoldering, Palmer did a fantastic job of escalating the romance and sexual tension between the two through the whole story, but then doesn't give the reader the payoff of them making love for the first time. She writes such amazing love scenes in most of her other books, but cut the story short this time, with no wedding and no wedding night that had been so anticipated. Great story otherwise, but I can't give it five stars without a trademark Palmer love scene.
GREAT BOOK.......2004-06-29
A BOOK THAT WILL KEEP YOU UP ALL NIGHT. IF YOU CAN FIND IT BUY IT.
Champagne Girl.......2003-11-13
A wonderful story! I have read this book at least five times already! If you are an avid fan of Diana Palmer than you should love this book! If you have yet to discover the unique brand of romance Diana Palmer creates then you should start with this one! The chemistry between the two characters sizzle!. I loved Catherine who was both weak and strong (for isn't that how most people are?)and Matt who exuded strength through every pore of his body and yet had that one weakness in him that every romance should have (a weakness for the heroine:)
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Champagne Girl
Audrie Manley-Tucker
Manufacturer: Ulverscroft Large Print
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1853896934 |
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The Champagne Girls
Tessa Barclay
Manufacturer: Ulverscroft Large Print
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Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 0750520078 |
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Champagne Girl
Diana Palmer
Manufacturer: Silhouette
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
ASIN: B000OVUTKQ |
Product Description
Mystery Man: Canton Rourke was besieged - by Janine Curtis. She was out to get him, he was sure of it. He'd come to Mexico with his daughter to relax, not catch bandits, track kidnappers...and not to save Janine from any mess she landed herself in!
Average customer rating:
- good read
- A far-futuristic symphony of ideas
- One word DEPTH.
- First class SF
- No need to be a music lover or a physicist.
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The Memory of Whiteness: A Scientific Romance
Kim Stanley Robinson
Manufacturer: Orb Books
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Icehenge
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The Gold Coast: Three Californias (Wild Shore Triptych)
ASIN: 0312861435 |
Amazon.com
Arthur Holywelkin, a brilliant physicist, devoted the last years of his life to creating a strange, beautiful musical instrument called The Orchestra. Hundreds of years later, in a universe centered around music, Johannes Wright is chosen as the Ninth Master of Holywelkin's Orchestra. Wright must travel the solar system pursued by enemies in the name of a destiny he understands only imperfectly.
Book Description
In 3229 A.D., human civilization is scattered among the planets, moons, and asteroids of the solar system. Billions of lives depend on the technology derived from the breakthroughs of the greatest physicist of the age, Arthur Holywelkin. But in the last years of his life, Holywelkin devoted himself to building a strange, beautiful, and complex musical instrument that he called The Orchestra.Johannes Wright has earned the honor of becoming the Ninth Master of Holywelkin's Orchestra. Follow him on his Grand Tour of the Solar System, as he journeys down the gravity well toward the sun, impelled by a destiny he can scarcely understand, and is pursued by mysterious foes who will tell him anything except the reason for their enmity.
Customer Reviews:
good read.......2005-08-17
I might get this for a plane ride or something. Story is mildly interesting, nothing ground-breaking or thought-provoking. Might want to get it from a public source, or as a gift to a cursory SF fan. Icehenge is MUCH better. Mr. Robinson must have been on autopilot for this one...yawn.
A far-futuristic symphony of ideas.......2002-03-20
Calling Robinson a stream-of-consciousness author may be unkind, thanks to the label's attachments... let's rather peg KSR as a stream-of-ideas craftsman.
Those that made their way thru the Mars trilogy and called the journey pleasant will testify that what kept them entranced was not any certain traditional literary technique, but instead a technique possibly unique to KSR himself. KSR builds rich gardens, scenes built on pure thought and ideas, realistic enough and utterly fascinating, and then allows his characters to wander within for awhile. We never are fully guided through any of these idea gardens, but as we close the book, we realize that he has left a meta-map of 5 or 6 of these for our minds to explore later. Asimov may have created 1 or 2 of these idea gardens (psychohistory, as one), but KSR does it repeatedly. It is a totally unique experience in literature.
Speaking to The Memory of Whiteness itself, it is set in the year 3229... that alone speaks volumes, and KSR builds the finest 4th milennium stage I've yet read. You will be guided on a tour of worlds and cultures (KSR also being a fine 'culture creator', another of his distinct footprints), and the entire idea of 'music' will transform before your eyes. The story moves along with good pace, with enough complexity to entice you to read it again, and builds to an ending that will haunt your waking days. So this one certainly deserves an A+.
One word DEPTH........2001-09-08
I would consider this one of the all around best works of modern fiction. The depth and breadth of the worked that Robinson creates is truly a wonder. Few writers can successfully juggle the complex ideas contained within this book and still present a coherent story.
When I started this novel I feared that the level of music theory and physics was going to overshadow the story and make for a dry and boring read. By the end of the third chapter I realized that I was hopelessly hooked and couldn't put the book down. This was not due to an attachment to characters but rather an involvement in the world that I have rarely felt.
Let's just hope that no one gets the bad idea to try and make a movie.
First class SF.......2001-01-31
A fine example of thinking man's SF a la Clarke, Asimov or Le Guin, this early work by Kim Stanley Robinson compels readers to ponder the nature of space and time, and their relationship to music - the major theme of the story. These themes are skillfully tied together in a very well-written and suspenseful story that takes its characters from one end of the solar system (Pluto) to the other (in orbit around the sun). Incidentally, this latter aspect was particularly well-rendered; Robinson really did a good job of describing what it would be like flying in a spacecraft along the sun's surface and hanging around in a space station just above the its flare zone. The story moves along quickly, and despite the author's exploration of various scientific and philosophical aspects of the nature of existence, he makes no grand statements in the end, leaving readers to ponder these matters and draw their own conclusions. Except for the author's annoying way of addressing the "dear Reader" when speaking in the narrative voice, this is an almost perfect short sci-fi novel.
No need to be a music lover or a physicist........2000-07-06
I do not include music or physics among my interests, yet I enjoyed MOW. The book really makes you think about the way things are (or appear to be). Since this book is about a musician, and you do read it as opposed to listening to it, the author wonderfully conveys the essence and the power of music. For this alone this book is a must read. After reading of one of the concerts in the book, I was left absolutley floored as the narrative was that powerful. This was the first KSR book I have read. I was very impressed with the connection the author made with me. KSR uniquely addresses the reader at various points throughout the book and that added to my reading experience. Some of the physics theory really slowed me down as I struggled to understand as much as I could. All in all a very engaging and thought provoking work.
Book Description
This lively history of the rise of Methodism charts the development of the movement from its unpromising origins in England in the 1730s to its major international importance by the 1880s. The book explores Methodism’s phenomenal growth in the British Isles, America, and around the globe, and the complex reasons for its wide-ranging appeal.
"This is an extraordinary book. It is jammed full of scintillating interpretations; it is beautifully written; and it conveys tremendous insight in a short compass. It will be recognized immediately as the classic work on the rise of Methodism."— Mark Noll, Wheaton College
"Clear, concise, original and formidably learned."—Eugen Weber, The Key Reporter
"Brilliantly provocative. . . . [A] masterful account."—Grant Wacker, Christian Century
Customer Reviews:
Methodism.......2005-07-29
David Hempton's Methodism: Empire of the Spirit is a lively, big-picture history of the rise and decline of Methodism. I didn't think it was a history of the Methodist church, but rather the movement itself. The book really does not talk much to what attracted people to the basics of Wesley's philosophy but it does offer solid insight into how the movement spread across the globe.
The book might have been better served had it devoted some time to explaining Wesley's early efforts in Bristol and other industrialized cities. It might also have spent time explaining the sense of community with the lower class people it so attracted. Also missing is what attracted people in America to the faith. Was it the message? Was it the organization? There had to be something that gave meteoric rise to the faith.
But enough of what the book didn't contain. It tells the story of many important people who gave the faith its meaning and brought multitudes to the meetings. The appeal to women, blacks, the dispossessed, all owes a debt to people like Francis Asbury, William Taylor, or the unsung itinerant preachers on horseback. The faith traveled with soldiers of the British Empire to India, Austalia, Africa, and made inroads in Korea and to a degree in Latin America. All of this was possible through religious zeal. Other works have explored the growth of Methodism among American slaves (Eugene Genovesee's Roll, Jordan, Roll is a strong example), but Mr. Hempton takes the argument full circle. Not only does he describe the growth, but also the decline. A web page cites Methodism as having 14 million members in the United States, so decline does not necessarily mean extinction.
The book is paced well enough that it should hold the readers attention. It tends to drag at times, but it is not overly long in the first place. It has some good statistics in the Appendix for any who enjoy such data. Methodist scholars and pastors will find many interesting tidbits in this book for sermons or other educational discussions.
Scriptural Holiness.......2005-04-27
This is a fine and fascinating book about a movement that changed the world. I rarely enjoy church history, but this is a well-written study, filled with anecdotes. It is a sociological and historical account; not reductionist, but not delving into spiritual maatters so much as how doctrine and practice led to the spread of the church.
I am surprised at how much I like this book: anyone interested in Methodism or early American religion will find this book to be both fun and informatiave.
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Methodism: Empire of the Spirit.(Book review): An article from: Church History
Douglas Jacobsen
Manufacturer: Thomson Gale
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Release Date: 2006-10-09 |
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This digital document is an article from Church History, published by Thomson Gale on September 1, 2006. The length of the article is 835 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Methodism: Empire of the Spirit.(Book review)
Author: Douglas Jacobsen
Publication:
Church History (Magazine/Journal)
Date: September 1, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 75
Issue: 3
Page: 714(3)
Article Type: Book review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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Methodism: Empire of the Spirit.(Book Review): An article from: Journal of Church and State
Thomas S. Kidd
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ASIN: B000BGK3Y6
Release Date: 2005-09-15 |
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Journal of Church and State, published by Thomson Gale on June 22, 2005. The length of the article is 526 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Methodism: Empire of the Spirit.(Book Review)
Author: Thomas S. Kidd
Publication:
Journal of Church and State (Magazine/Journal)
Date: June 22, 2005
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 47
Issue: 3
Page: 631(2)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This digital document is an article from The Historian, published by Thomson Gale on December 22, 2006. The length of the article is 518 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Methodism: Empire of the Spirit.(Book review)
Author: John T. Smith
Publication:
The Historian (Magazine/Journal)
Date: December 22, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 68
Issue: 4
Page: 905(2)
Article Type: Book review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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