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The Wordy Shipmates
by
Discussion
2008-Oct-Nov-Dec
Why we're reading this
October 7, 2008; October 5, 2009

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Group Discussions About This Book

This topic has been closed to new comments. * December 2008
By Tiffany , WristStrong · 1 post · 9 views
last updated Jan 07, 2011 02:50PM
This topic has been closed to new comments. * November 2008
By Tiffany , WristStrong · 1 post · 9 views
last updated Jan 07, 2011 02:36PM

What Members Thought

Steven Harbin
May 04, 2010 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I love Sarah Vowell. There's no other way to put it. This book is a perfect blend of historical essay and pop culture lit. Vowell's take on the Puritan Massachusetts Bay colony and Governor John Winthrop shows the "shining city on the hill" ideal as the Puritans saw it; which is not quite the way that Ronald Reagan meant it when he co-opted the phrase in the 1980's. Vowell is one of the few authors in the world today who can tie the two visions together and show how the people we are today can r ...more
Judy
Aug 07, 2011 rated it really liked it
For me, this book was really a 4.5, but I think that you really have to be interested in early American history to be as entralled with this book as much as I was. To hear conservative social commentators tell it, the United States is still "the city upon a hill" of John Winthrop. But, as Sarah Vowell discovers in The Wordy Shipmates, Puritans were very different from the impression that contemporary society has created. While being claimed by Fundamentalists of the Religious Right, Vowell point ...more
Wallace
Sep 14, 2009 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction
For those of us who love U.S. History, this is like getting extra cupcakes at a birthday party. If Sarah Vowell had been your teacher in school, she would have been the cool one. The one whose class you couldn't wait to get to because she was smart (and by smart I mean seriously intelligent) and funny and dorky/hip and you actually remembered what she was teaching because it didn't feel like history.

In The Wordy Shipmates, Vowell takes us through the colonization of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
...more
Harold Ogle
Sep 29, 2011 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: humor, history
Very engaging reading, The Wordy Shipmates is essentially a long character study of the complicated figure John Winthrop, founder and on-again, off-again governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 17th century. There is a moderate amount of history presented here, in a conversational format rather than as a strict chronology, but it serves to illustrate and illuminate the motivations behind various and diverse actions over the course of Winthrop's lifetime, from the hopeful outset of the in ...more
Courtney
Apr 06, 2011 rated it really liked it
This was the first time I have done an audio book. I really liked it, but realized that I reread things a lot. I know alot of people thought this was too much history and not enough Sarah...but I really liked the history. There is still enough Sarah for me, but I've only read one other book of hers, so maybe that is the difference. I'm just such a fan of her, I love how she is liberal, but not elitist snobby, especially when it comes to religion.
...more
Virginia
Jul 02, 2010 rated it really liked it
Shelves: history
Vowell does an excellent job of making me care about the petty arguments of the puritans. They were an uptight, but interesting bunch. I had no idea of the intense power struggle John Winthrop went through in trying to hold the infant city of Boston together, even if some of the conflicts seemed like trivial theological battles. I also gained a lot of respect for Anne Hutchinson. The woman had guts...and was too smart for the men around her. Thus, the banishment.

Can't wait to read Assassination
...more
Elsa Feiring
Oct 31, 2008 rated it really liked it
Being the first Sarah Vowell book I've read, I truly enjoyed her style and humor. I love this kind of history when it's told with a witty bent, and she accomplishes this extremely well. I learned a good deal about the Puritans in early America, and I laughed a lot. Mission accomplished. Now I'm looking forward to reading Assassination Vacation. ...more
Letitia
Nov 13, 2022 rated it really liked it
Shelves: pb-swap, 2022
My first Sarah Vowell. I have officially found someone with exactly my sense of humor, which is to say...not for everyone. I find her delightful. It's pithy, it's history, it's pithtory. Maybe a little heavier on the research side than the humor one, and sometimes hard to follow the annoyingly similar Puritan names, but a good read with a fresh perspective. ...more
Karla Keffer
Feb 01, 2009 rated it really liked it
What I learned from this book: The Massachusetts Bay Colony seal featuring an Indian saying "Come over and help us" is a direct ascendant of the phrase "I think such-and-such would be a good experience for you." ...more
Linda
Oct 09, 2008 marked it as to-read
Dinh
Oct 09, 2008 marked it as to-read
Shelves: non-fiction, 2000s
Tresa
Nov 24, 2008 rated it really liked it
Samantha
Mar 06, 2009 rated it it was amazing
Aod
Jun 15, 2009 rated it it was ok
Porkinsred6
Sep 07, 2009 rated it really liked it
Phyllis | Mocha Drop
Oct 12, 2009 rated it really liked it
Shelves: satire, historical
Jessica
Nov 23, 2009 rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2009, non-fiction, history
Catherine Newell
May 14, 2010 rated it it was ok
Lorna
Jul 14, 2010 rated it really liked it
Kris
Aug 18, 2010 rated it really liked it
Manifest Stefany
Jun 04, 2011 rated it really liked it
Tracy
Aug 21, 2012 rated it liked it
Shelves: non-fiction
Eric
Sep 30, 2012 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Nicholas
Dec 18, 2012 marked it as to-read
siouxzee
Jul 29, 2015 rated it really liked it
Shelves: history
Jennifer
Aug 21, 2017 marked it as to-read
Shelves: my-tbr
Pedro
Jul 12, 2021 marked it as to-read
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