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God’s Traitors
God’s Traitors
Oct 8, 2024 10:55 AM

Author:Jessie Childs

God’s Traitors

*Winner of the PEN Hessell-Tiltman Prize*

*Longlisted for The Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction*

*A Sunday Times Book of the Year*

*A Daily Telegraph Book of the Year*

*A Times Book of the Year*

*An Observer Book of the Year*

A woman awakes in a prison cell.

She has been on the run but the authorities have tracked her down and taken her to the Tower of London - where she is interrogated about the Gunpowder Plot.

The woman is Anne Vaux - one of the ardent, brave and exasperating members of the aristocratic Vauxes of Harrowden Hall.

Through the eyes of this remarkable family, award-winning author Jessie Childs explores the Catholic predicament in Elizabethan England - an age in which their faith was criminalised and almost two hundred Catholics were executed.

From dawn raids to daring escapes, stately homes to torture chambers, God's Traitors exposes the tensions masked by the cult of Gloriana - and is a timely reminder of the terrible consequences when religion and politics collide.

Reviews

A triumph of story-telling, backed by first-rate research

—— Antonia Fraser

Absorbing, exciting and relevant

—— Ben MacIntyre , The Times Book of the Week

Richly packed, absorbing... A parade of extraordinary characters

—— Simon Callow , Guardian

Thrilling

—— New Statesman

God’s Traitors, with its crisp prose and punctilious scholarship, brilliantly recreates a world of heroism and holiness in Tudor England... It is little short of a triumph

—— Ian Thomson , Financial Times

Beautifully written... Hollywood could not have made it up

—— Professor JJ Scarisbrick

Brilliant

—— Wall Street Journal

Truly excellent... God's Traitors crosses the divide between popular and academic history. It raises issues of some real historical importance

—— Michael Questier , Spectator

This vivid, minutely researched and brilliantly original history is a much-needed look at the dark side of the Elizabethan age

—— Dan Jones , Sunday Times

Excellent... An engaging history of English papists, filled with memorable episodes

—— The Economist

In the quality of her research and sensitive handling of issues that remain raw to this day, Jessie Childs succeeds in evoking ‘the lived experience of anti-Catholicism’ as few have done before... Childs’s language is lively and inventive... By picturing Elizabethan recusants in all their complexity, Jessie Childs has enabled them to speak for themselves at last

—— John Cooper , Literary Review

Superb and groundbreaking... It isn’t possible in the space of a review to do justice to the breadth and depth of Childs’ research and insight; but they illuminate the entire landscape of English life...a superlative, flawlessly written book... Childs’ description of an exorcism at Lord Vaux’s house in Hackney...is one of the most extraordinary things I have ever read

—— Matthew Lyons, author of The Favourite

Plots and priest holes abound

—— Caroline Sanderson , Bookseller

Childs is a lucid, passionate writer and she gets under the skin of her subject... It's not often that history books get the balance of expert research and storytelling with chutzpah just right but Childs has managed it with this informative and entertaining book

—— Doug Johnstone , Big Issue

[A] moving historical account... Childs paints a vivid, sometimes even humorous picture of devout Catholics keeping up appearances

—— Daisy Dunn , Daily Mail

Vivid but measured…never has the actual experience of the recusants been rendered with such a wealth of searing detail…richly packed, absorbing… It is a parade of extraordinary characters and a banquet of Elizabethan and Jacobean prose

—— Simon Callow , Guardian (Book of the Week)

This superbly researched and vividly narrated account conjures a lost world of exorcisms, priest’s holes and miracle-performing relics

—— David Gelber , Country Life

[A] fascinating work of narrative history… What makes Childs’s book different is that she concentrates not on the derring-do of the foreign diplomats and priest-adventurers – who invariably ended up hung, drawn and quartered – but on the stay-at-home English Catholics who were obliged to negotiate their divided loyalties in these trickiest of times

—— Kathryn Hughes , Mail on Sunday

Splendid book… Childs does a splendid job of explaining this unenviable situation and of putting it in the wider context of Elizabethan Catholic life. There are many fruitful digressions

—— Jonathan Wright , The Tablet

An impressive history

—— Daily Telegraph

A gripping account of an aristocratic family defying Elizabeth I’s thought police and executioners

—— Camden New Journal

· Thorough research coupled to a vigorous, readable style… This colourful saga of a downwardly mobile family on the losing side of national events reminds us that history is not all about the winners

—— Derek Wilson , History Today

All the way through, you ask: just how far would I go to protect and express my faith?

—— Sinclair McKay , Evening Standard

It’s been eight years since Jessie Childs’ last book, and her latest…was worth the wait

—— Chris Skidmore , BBC History Magazine

Thought-provoking and timely

—— Ben Macintyre , The Times

There have been many books on the turbulent lives of Catholics in post-Reformation England, but Childs’s nuances account of the Vauxes of Harrowden Hall in Northhamptonshire convinced me there is still new ground to explore or, at least, revisit with fresh eyes

—— Jonathan Wright , Herald

A timely exposé of our gruesome, intolerant past

—— 5 stars , Daily Telegraph

[A] gripping and superbly written book

—— Mail on Sunday
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