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Book Reviews of The Witches: Salem, 1692

The Witches: Salem, 1692
The Witches Salem 1692
Author: Stacy Schiff
ISBN-13: 9780316200592
ISBN-10: 031620059X
Publication Date: 9/20/2016
Pages: 512
Rating:
  • Currently 3.1/5 Stars.
 8

3.1 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Back Bay Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Minehava avatar reviewed The Witches: Salem, 1692 on + 829 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
If there's one historical event that the citizens of the United States had better never forget, it's the 1692 Salem Witch Craze, and historian Stacy Schiff's newest work could have gone a long way towards re-establishing the tragedies and injustices of the Witch Trials in the public consciousness--if the public could read it. In spite of all the laudatory blurbs provided to Amazon by the work's publisher, twice the number of Amazon Customer reviewers give it one or two stars than give it five. Three- and four-star reviews are in shortest supply. Sadly, there's a reason for this. "The Witches: Salem, 1692" is probably one of the most disorganized contemporary historical works that I've seen. The author begins by a caustic dismissal of perhaps the best known popular history of the Witch hysteria, Marion Starkey's 1949 "The Devil in Massachusetts", and undoubtedly the best known fictional portrayal, Arthur Miller's "The Crucible": "The Holocaust sent Marion Starkey toward Salem witchcraft in 1949. She produced the volume that would inspire Arthur Miller to write 'The Crucible' at the outset of the McCarthy crisis. Along with Nathaniel Hawthorne, Miller has largely made off with the story (p. 11)."

That sounds an awful lot like sour grapes, but to be fair, Stacy Schiff may have one legitimate gripe. She argues that most recent historians before her, including Starkey, have utilized sources that have been traditionally viewed as primary, but which are actually secondary, to begin the witchcraft story--namely, the monographs the ministers Increase and Cotton Mather penned one to five years after the craze had subsided. Only from the Mather writings, she contends, do we get the idea that the girls of Salem Village were introduced to witchcraft by elementary voudoun and fortune telling practiced by the Parris family's West Indian slave, Tituba, and Schiff theorizes that this was a "must-have-been" hypothesis supplied by the Mathers rather than an "actually-was" fact that could be gleaned from court documents or other contemporary records. For all that, though, Schiff chooses to prove her point by an eye-crossing myriad of dry, repetitive, poorly-arranged data that goes in, around, up, down, across, and through the chronological line to suggest that not only interpersonal community tensions but a confusing Gordian knot of other contributory factors, including even the political attitudes of a cabal of ministers who had worked together to oust the previous governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Edward Andros, and establish the new one, William Phips, all had their part in the great witch scare.

I note with dismay how many other reviewers remark that they gave up trying to read the book, or simply started skimming, after so many pages along, because finally, on pp. 386-398, Schiff offers her own thoughts on the phenomenon's causes: hysteria, as defined first by Jean-Martin Charcot and later Sigmund Freud. And, by the anthropomorphic, schizophrenic-as-the-humans-who-thought-it-up God that the Puritans worshiped, she stands a danged good chance of being right. But if Schiff had only stated her thesis at her work's beginning and built her historical case around it in an orderly and logical manner, much as Marion Starkey had done with her own thoughts in 1949 however much they may have been influenced by Cotton and Increase Mather's after-the-fact hypotheses, Schiff could have produced a much more readable and compelling volume
pigwoman avatar reviewed The Witches: Salem, 1692 on + 82 more book reviews
The book was OK. It was a lot of supposition.
terez93 avatar reviewed The Witches: Salem, 1692 on + 323 more book reviews
I've read innumerable books about the Salem Witch Trials, as well as the "witchcraze" phenomenon which gripped western Europe in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and I have to say that I'm ambivalent about this one. My first reaction to it on the whole is: sensationalistic, but that is highly simplistic. "Lyrical prose," a phrase found in the description, is generous; overwrought might be a more apt description. The books is exhaustively researched, but some of its conclusions are questionable, based on rather flimsy evidence and poetic license. The work as a whole consists essentially of "thick description," which certainly has its place, but the style borders on theatrical, which to me is out of place, as the entire episode at the time was, so there's no need to continue to make it a spectacle.

It purports to take the form a minute-by-minute account of the strange episode that gripped this otherwise-unremarkable community in the year 1692, in an almost journalistic fashion (the writing does seem to lend itself to that style) but it's often difficult to follow because of the plethora of tangents. On the whole, it's definitely a worthwhile read, however. It provides a wealth of information about the most prominent persons involved in the events, as well as a masterful untangling of all the competing interests, which contributed as much as anything to what many have called one of the most shameful episodes in American history.

-------------Notable Passages------------
The two most notable passages to me seem to offer at least a fair theory on why this episode occurred at all. The first: "From those things the devil promised we can glimpse what the seventeenth-century girl dreamed of: splendid finery, travel abroad, fashion books, leisure, gold, a husband, help with the housework.... Insofar as they dared to dream, these girls dreamed-at the ashen end of New England winter-of journeys to exotic realms and in supersaturated color. From Tituba's on down, the Salem testimony explodes with invigorating , over-the-rainbow intensity. It is all bluebirds and canaries, yellow dogs and rats, red meat, red bread, red books. Deprivation, however, had its limits. Even with the regular fasts, there was no hungering after (or enticing with) food. No daughter, niece, cousin, servant, or slave longed for a roast beef with pumpkin sauce or a luscious apple pudding or a dish of sugared almonds. Rather the girls appeared starved for color, expressionist splashes of which light up their testimonies, nearly conjuring ruby slippers.

The second: History is not rich in unruly young women: with the exception of Joan of Arc and a few underage sovereigns, it would be difficult to name another historical moment so dominated by teenage virgins, traditionally a vulnerable, must, and disenfranchised cohort. From the start, the Salem girls made themselves heard. Theirs quickly proved the decisive voices. By April a core group of eight girls assumed oracular import. Twitching and thrusting, they played the role of bloodhounds, soothsayers, folk healers, moral authorities, martyrs to a cause.