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| Publisher:
William Morrow ISBN: 978-0060821791 List Price: $25.95 | Publisher:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson ISBN: 978-0297852582 RRP: £12.99 | |
Colleagues and Critics Buy the Paperback at HarperCollins Buy the Paperback at Amazon.com | ||
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The Last Witchfinder tells of Jennet Stearne, who makes it her life's mission to bring down the 1604 Parlimentary Witchcraft Act. She is aided in this endeavor by some luminaries of her day: | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Benjamin Franklin |
Sir Isaac Newton |
Baron de Montesquieu | ||||||||||||||||||
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We
first meet Jennet as a precocious child studying natural philosophy
with her Aunt Isobel, a landed |
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| Elinor’s father, Reverend Mapes, worries that Isobel’s experiments partake of blasphemy. Walter applies the witch tests, soon determining that his sister-in-law is indeed a Satanist. Isobel is tried, convicted, and condemned to death. Before the sentence is carried out, Isobel makes Jennet promise that she will devote her life to destroying the Witchcraft Act. |
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Furious at Walter
for executing a landholder, King William banishes him to |
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| Jennet’s family
returns to |
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Several years into her Nimacook captivity, Jennet visits the Bedford Trading Post, where some demonologists are “swimming a witch.” If the suspect floats, she has clearly compacted with Satan, for running water cannot abide a heretic. Jennet realizes that she must resume her campaign against the Witchcraft Act. |
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| After her escape from the Nimacooks, a marriage of convenience to a Colonial postmaster enables Jennet to write her treatise. Complications ensue, designs go awry, and Jennet is once again on her own until she meets the young Benjamin Franklin, whose electricity experiments generate romantic sparks. |
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Plagued with
doubts about her treatise, Jennet accompanies Ben to |
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| During their
return voyage Jennet and Ben are shipwrecked on a | ||
Back in |
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A SELF-INTERVIEW WITH JAMES MORROW
Q: Book
reviewers have categorized your previous novels as wild Vonnegutian
satires full of fantastical and even surrealistic events. Why
this sudden leap into straight historical fiction? A: The
leap was a long time coming. About twenty years ago I had a
mind-boggling encounter with a single sentence in Masks of
the Universe, a history of science by the
physicist-astronomer Edward Harrison. At one point Harrison
asserts that the “witch universe,” the zeitgeist of the late
Renaissance, would have “destroyed European society but for the
intervention of science.” And I said to myself, “What a great
subject for a novel!” Even if Q: So you
spent twenty years researching and writing The Last
Witchfinder? You have a long attention span. A: Not
the past twenty years, no. I kept deferring the project,
daunted by its scope, and composed other sorts of fiction
instead. But I never stopped thinking about Q: Why
did the main character have to be a woman? A: I’ve
always enjoyed creating strong female protagonists. My fourth
novel, Only Begotten Daughter, recounts the
adventures of Jesus Christ’s divine half-sister in contemporary Q: Jennet
Stearne is a formidable heroine: brilliant, sharp-tongued,
courageous. But why would even the cleverest 17th-century
woman imagine she had the intellectual and political resources to
destroy the “witch universe”? A: Throughout
her quest, Jennet takes heart in a kind of talisman bestowed on her by
Aunt Isobel: a letter from Isaac Newton in which he implies that a
“demon disproof” lies hidden between the lines of his scientific
masterwork, the Principia Mathematica.
Jennet comes to believe that, by studying the Principia,
she’ll uncover an argument that will persuade the English legislature
to overturn the Witchcraft Statute. After several false
starts, she manages to write a persuasive treatise, but then she faces
an even bigger problem: convincing Parliament to read it. And
so, in a daring move, Jennet puts herself on trial for witchcraft in
Colonial Philadelphia, using the attendant “media circus” to publicize
her argument. Q: Is Jennet based on a real person? A: No,
though many women of this era, through their salons and soirées, were
passionately involved with the new mechanical science — or, as it was
called then, “natural philosophy” — of Descartes and Newton.
The recent epochal exhibit at the New York Public Library called The
Newtonian Moment featured a gallery of “Newtonian Women,”
among them Laura Bassi, Diamante Medaglia Faini, Maria Gaetana Agnesi,
and Voltaire’s celebrated collaborator, Madame du Châtelet.
In the 1750’s Oliver Goldsmith, noting the phenomenon of women wedding
themselves to natural philosophy, remarked that a man “who would court
a lady must be capable of discussing Q: So
Jennet is your own creation, but many actual historical figures parade
through the novel: Benjamin Franklin, Isaac Newton, Robert Hooke,
Cotton Mather, the Baron de Montesquieu. Q: But in
The Last Witchfinder A: I
realized that I could use these fascinating characters as symbols of
the two universes: Q: Extreme
cases to be sure. But wouldn’t it be fair to say that most
people during this period lived in both universes at the same time? A: Indeed.
That’s what makes the worldview of early modern Q: This large theme of yours, the clash between Renaissance theology and Enlightenment science — for some prospective readers, it may sound a trifle dry. A: Or
even dull? Q: Or even dull. And yet The Last Witchfinder is a rollicking, satiric, picaresque, and sometimes bawdy adventure. As the plot progresses, Jennet runs afoul of Indians, pirates, whores, scoundrels, charlatans, hurricanes, and a smallpox epidemic. A: My models included those juicy, spirited, comic novels of the 17th and 18th centuries — Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, Henry Fielding’s Joseph Andrews, and, of course, Voltaire’s Candide — that people still read today with pleasure. I especially enjoyed juxtaposing the scientific and the erotic, as when Jennet and Ben Franklin seduce each other while performing an experiment with a rotating sulphur ball. They’re diligently determining the degree to which a human body can conduct static electricity, and soon they’re sparkling and crackling with mutual desire, and before long they’re swiving on the mattress in Ben’s garret. Q: Swiving? A: It
rhymes with driving. Q: You
mentioned that the encounter between A: I was continually delighted by now much real history I could incorporate into The Last Witchfinder. It seemed as if these glittering shards of the past were lying around in a field, and all I had to do was glue them together into an urn of my own design. Q: Almost
as if the book was asking to be written? A: Exactly.
At one point the storyline required Jennet to be abducted by Algonquin
Indians from her home in Q: Evidently
you did a lot of research. A: More
that I care to think about. I began with weighty tomes like
Stuart Clark’s Thinking with Demons and Bernard
Cohen’s Franklin and Newton. At one point
I even waded into Andrew Motte’s famous English translation of the Principia
Mathematica. Thanks to a rigorous high school
calculus class, I more-or-less understood what was going on.
The real fun was the legwork I did on both sides of the Q: We
began by talking about The Last Witchfinder as your
foray into straight historical fiction. But the novel has one
frankly fantastical dimension. The narrator technically is
not James Morrow but rather A: I’d
always envisioned The Last Witchfinder as a
qualified defense of the 18th-century Enlightenment. And yet
these days, I’ve noticed, the Age of Reason has few friends.
The religious right detests the Enlightenment because it leads to
secularism; postmodern academics reject the Enlightenment as the
presumed progenitor of an oppressive scientism; and the New Age fringe
invites us to regard Reason as Spirituality’s feeble and overrated
shadow. So from the instant I started composing chapter one,
I wanted to incorporate a contemporary perspective — not only to give
the anti-Enlightenment argument its due, but as a way to avoid the bane
of historical fiction: characters who are implausibly aware of what
their lives will mean to their descendants. At first I tried
to achieve this distance by having Aunt Isobel compose a long,
prophetic poem in which she foresees the French Revolution and other
disasters accruing to the apotheosis of Reason. But it didn’t
ring true, and so I tried an even stranger ploy: turning the narration
over to Q: Your Principia
narrator invites us to regard the witch-persecution era as a mirror of
our present age. Do you see The Last Witchfinder
as an allegory on the contemporary problem of faith versus rationality? A: If
satire is what closes on Saturday night, allegory doesn’t even get into
the theater — nor should it. The last thing I had in mind was
inflicting an uplifting lesson on the reader. That said,
we’re obviously living in an age when theology is again leading people
down some very dark paths indeed. Whether we’re talking about
the rise of jihadism or recent attempts to cast “intelligent design” as
commensurate with
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