
Mayflower
A Story of Courage, Community, and War
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Narrado por:
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George Guidall
The Mayflower's religious refugees arrived in Plymouth Harbor during a period of crisis for Native Americans as disease spread by European fishermen devastated their populations. Initially the two groups, the Wampanoags, under the charismatic and calculating chief Massasoit, and the Pilgrims, whose pugnacious military officer Miles Standish was barely five feet tall, maintained a fragile working relationship. But within decades, New England would erupt into King Philip's War, a savagely bloody conflict that nearly wiped out English colonists and natives alike and forever altered the face of the fledgling colonies and the country that would grow from them.
With towering figures like William Bradford and the distinctly American hero Benjamin Church at the center of his narrative, Philbrick has fashioned a fresh and compelling portrait of the dawn of American history, a history dominated right from the start by issues of race, violence, and religion.
©2006 Nathaniel Philbrick (P)2006 Penguin Audio, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., and Recorded Books, LLC. All rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
ALA Notable Book Winner, 2006
Booklist Editor's Choice, 2006
Chicago Tribune Best Books of 2006
New York Times 10 Best Books of the Year, 2006
Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year - Adult, 2006
Pulitzer Prize Finalist - History, 2007
San Francisco Chronicle Best Books, 2006
Washington Post Best Books of 2006
"Impeccably researched and expertly rendered, Philbrick's account brings the Plymouth Colony and its leaders...vividly to life. More importantly, he brings into focus a gruesome period in early American history." (Publishers Weekly)
"Startling [and] fascinating." (The New York Times)
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awe-inspiring history but mistitled
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Fantastic
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I really enjoyed this book and wish it would have been something available when studying the founding of the country when I was in grade school junior high or high school. Granted it would be beyond the scope of a normal class to get through all of these details, but it’s also a good lesson as to how history gets revised and forgotten completely because there is only a feeble attempt by Americans today to understand the full context of how and why our country was ultimately settled and conquered/founded by Europeans. And that conquering portion is an important detail. But not in the way that many current day Americans loathe the country that they live in. These people are so self-centered they cannot appreciate all of the beauty and ugliness that needed to take place to bring us to present day America. So therefore they only focus on one aspect at the expense of appreciating what they have today in their ability to complain nonstop about how the native Americans were killed, robbed and otherwise mistreated.
It is absolutely tragic that the indigenous Indians were treated fairly -or even as humans- as the continent begin to attract more European settlers. But the fact remains this is part of the bloody, ugly portion of our country‘s history that needs to be told and heard and internalized. The irony and possibly dual irony of the founding mainly happen because Christians were being persecuted in their home countries and decided to risk everything they had to move to a new place where they could worship freely and in doing so ultimately betrayed their Christian beliefs in the pursuit of money and land and worldly possessions. And this was ultimately done at the expense of the lives & livelihood of the native Americans.
I also found a very fascinating be back-and-forth from peace to hate to peace and hate -fighting and friendship and friendship and fighting -that took place between Original inhabitants and the Interlopers. Just seemed like a very balanced account of white both sides thought of one another how they interacted and the good bad and ugly of the various encounters including double dealings. It wasn’t all white man bad and it was an all red man bad. There’s no doubt though even with this account the European settlers created much of the ill will and propensity to war because of their behavior and suspiciousness. I also track a certain amount of their attitude towards desperation. Especially the very early generation of settlers who were treated so poorly by their country man or fellow Europeans who took complete advantage of them.
I would also say that is an excellent epilogue it goes into more detail on really how the author thinks the American character was created out of these instances. I think he makes a very strong case for why America is the way it is and why it has such a pioneering spirit and will figure it out and The end justifies the means in which we accomplish things that no other countries seem to be able to do. Similar to the Winston Churchill quote United States will exhaust all options before stumbling upon the right one. Or something to that effect.
The The reader for this audiobook did an excellent job and reminds me of the mini voice artist at work on other documentaries for history channel type programs. Just a very pleasant and articulate voice to listen to for me. I would definitely listen to more books if they were historical in nature if this was there the reader.
Freedom through tragedy
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Great Book and research
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Mayflower
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Philbrick brings in all marvelously to life.
And in doing so, he restores the richness, complexity, and ambiguity of the real world.
The arrival of the Pilgrims wasn't the first contact New England Indians had with Europeans--and those earlier contacts had brought diseases the Native Americans had no previous encounter with. What had been a thickly settled region was now startlingly empty, with many whole villages wiped out diseases that killed so many there weren't enough healthy people to care for the sick. There was, in fact, room for the Pilgrims--if they could learn to live with their neighbors, and their neighbors could learn to live with them.
Philbrick gives us the fascinating tale of how, for fifty years, the Pilgrims and the local Indian tribes, most notably the Pokanoket, under the leadership of Massasoit, built an often uneasy but mutually beneficial working relationship that benefited all the groupings involved. We see the ways the Indians and the English influenced each other, learned from each other, and helped each other.
And then we see how it all broke down, first under Massasoit's older son, Alexander, and then his younger son, Philip--as well as the sons and grandsons of the English founders, including Josiah Winslow, William Bradford, Benjamin Church, and others--engaged in a cascading series of poor decisions, failures of diplomacy, and failures to communicate.
All the peoples and cultures involved were more complex and interesting than the standard version, and that includes the Pilgrims, the Massachusetts Bay colony,and the different Indian tribes.
Highly recommended.
I bought this book.
A new look at "familiar" American history
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Important history
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This history of Southern New England from the Mayflower's arrival through the turn of 17th century was a harrowing account of the period. From alliance to war. From foothold to expansion. I was hooked on this story. I loved learning about the people who shaped the area that has been my home. Benjamin Church, Phillip and Canochet. It's a heartbreaking history of the Native population. I recommend anyone with any interest in this period give this book your attention.
Exciting heartbreak
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great story
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The author does not ignore the brutality of the Indian wars, but mercifully does not go into the gory details. He just stated the facts such as, "these 10 men were captured and tortured to death", or "the dwellings were burned down with the inhabitants still inside". It must have been a horrific time to be alive.
This is a great book for anyone interested in this portion of our American history. The narrator was well choosen and did an outstanding job of presenting the story.
Great Book of Documented History
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