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Fierce Convictions

The Extraordinary Life of Hannah More: Poet, Reformer, Abolitionist

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Fierce Convictions weaves together world and personal history into a stirring story of life that intersected with Wesley and Whitefield's Great Awakening, the rise and influence of Evangelicalism, and convulsive effects of the French Revolution.

With a foreword by Eric Metaxas, best-selling author of Bonhoeffer and Amazing Grace. The enthralling biography of the woman writer who helped end the slave trade, changed Britain's upper classes, and taught a nation how to read.

The history-changing reforms of Hannah More affected every level of 18th-Century British society through her keen intellect, literary achievements, collaborative spirit, strong Christian principles, and colorful personality. A woman without connections or status, More took the world of British letters by storm when she arrived in London from Bristol, becoming a best-selling author and acclaimed playwright and quickly befriending the author Samuel Johnson, the politician Horace Walpole, and the actor David Garrick. Yet she was also a leader in the Evangelical movement, using her cultural position and her pen to support the growth of education for the poor, the reform of morals and manners, and the abolition of Britain's slave trade.

Fierce Convictions weaves together world and personal history into a stirring story of life that intersected with Wesley and Whitefield's Great Awakening, the rise and influence of Evangelicalism, and convulsive effects of the French Revolution. A woman of exceptional intellectual gifts and literary talent, Hannah More was above all a person whose faith compelled her both to engage her culture and to transform it.

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    • Booklist

      November 15, 2014
      Author Prior fills a gap in women's studies by offering up her highly researched and entertaining biography of the multitalented and fiercely smart British writer, abolitionist, and evangelist Hannah More (17451833). In a time when women were rarely educated in anything other than domestic arts, More and her sisters started schools for girls and the poor that educated them in the types of knowledge typically reserved for males and the wealthy. More herself was a firebrandseeking able and useful helpmates (e.g., Horace Walpole, Samuel Johnson) in achieving her aims. In addition to working to abolish slavery, she wrote controversial plays, poetry, and more, never marrying but having instead, as Virginia Woolf would later say, a room of her own, which gave her the freedom to promote her causes. Prior's extensive research includes contemporaneous biographies of More, which often softened or misreported; the result is a fascinating portrait of an unusual, tenacious, and caring womanwho lived through the American, French, and Industrial Revolutionsfor whom expanding the moral imagination through her words was her life's work. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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