UPDATE: The book was published September 23, 2015.
It's called EFFIGY HUNTER,
and is available with my other books at http://bit.ly/RobinsonAuthor
It has unanimous five-star reviews from satisfied readers.
Books by Eve LaPlante, David Teems, Francis Bremer, John Fox, and Nathaniel Philbrick, fascinating nonfiction set in the 17th century. |
Jo Ann Butler — From England to New England: survival, love, and a dynasty.
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Susanna Calkins — Murder mysteries set in 1660s London.
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Francine Howarth — Heroines, swashbuckling romance.
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Judith James — Rakes and rogues of the Restoration.
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Elizabeth Kales — French Huguenot survival of Inquisition.
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Juliet Haines Mofford — True crime of New England, pirates.
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Mary Novik — Rev. John Donne and daughter.
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Donald Michael Platt — Spanish Inquisition cloak and dagger.
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Katherine Pym — London in the 1660s.
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Diane Rapaport — Colonial New England true crime.
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Peni Jo Renner — Salem witch trials.
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Anita Seymour — Royalists and rebels in English Civil War.
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Mary Sharratt — Witches (healers) of Pendle Hill, 1612.
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Alison Stuart — Time-slip war romance, ghosts.
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Sam Thomas — Midwife solves murders in city of York.
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Suzy Witten — Salem witch trials.
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Andrea Zuvich — Vampire in Stuart reign, Duke of Monmouth and mistress.
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I belong to a religious tradition that values the contributions of women. The weekly magazine I edited for nearly eighteen years published an annual women's edition and many other articles about women—both clergy and lay—who excelled in ministry and community service. Many women have followed Mary’s grand example, mostly on a far smaller scale. Few have had such lasting influence.
I discovered that my ancestry includes two of the most influential Christian women in American history: Mary Dyer and Mary’s friend and mentor Anne Marbury Hutchinson, who made her own significant contribution.
This Dyer blog has provided a rich source of reliable information about my ancestor Mary. I also discovered another rich, and enjoyable, source. I took Christy Robinson's novels about Mary Barrett Dyer with me on a recent international trip and devoured them both. Mary Dyer Illuminated and Mary Dyer: For Such a Time as This were both page-turners for me.
***** (rated five stars) “Mary Barrett Dyer is one of very few 17th-century women who are remembered today. She is usually described as a Quaker hanged in the cause of religious freedom, but genealogists and historians know there is much more to her. Christy K Robinson brings the Dyers to vivid life for the rest of us, weaving superb fiction with what is known into a penetrating novel. Robinson’s research is flawless, and her engaging characters invite you into their brilliantly imagined world. Brava!” – Jo Ann Butler, author of Rebel Puritan trilogy.I seldom read fiction, but Christy’s writing is presented on a framework of reliable, detailed history, so there is abundant information to be gleaned … and in an entertaining way. I felt the time I invested in these books was well worthwhile. Christy’s compelling narrative greatly aided in making Mary a real person to me. These are fascinating books that deserve a much-expanded exposure. They are simply outstanding, a feast for lovers of history and good writing.