It's an absolutely phenomenonal book. Obbie Tyler Todd provides a deeply researched and very well written study of the familiar Beecher family from the Second Great Awakening through the early 20th century. We see their close yet strained personal relationships, all following from the children of Lyman Beecher from his three wives (as he was twice widowed). We also follow these brilliant public lives joined yet contested as pastors, theologians, novelists, college presidents, and, aways, social reformers. Lastly, we see their tragic devolution from Puritan orthodoxy modified by the New Light movement, through abolitionism, the Civil War, women's rights, and into apostacy in some cases through the rejection of core Christian doctrines, dabbling in spiritualism, and eventually succumbing to the crisis of faith so common among educated Americans in the Victorian Era in response to Darwinism and German higher criticism. Tragically, we might wonder if any of the members of this illustrious American family from the heart of American Puritanism were Christians at all by the end of this history. We learn so much from this granular study of this multifaceted American family.
Impeccably researched and expertly written. Obbie Todd offers a noteworthy contribution to scholarship, as well as a much-needed corrective to the popular revisionism of the Beechers which has transpired over the last several decades. Grateful for this work.
The first 50 pages or so would have benefited from more aggressive editing to streamline the various threads and make the big ideas more understandable. After that, it became very readable. Really a fascinating family.