[bksvol-discuss] OOps--sorry for the duplication

  • From: Cindy Rosenthal <popularplace@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008 18:21:01 -0700 (PDT)

I should have read further in my mail before forwarding Elizabeth's note to me. 
Sorry, folks and E. 

Cindy

--- On Mon, 10/27/08, E. <thoth93@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> From: E. <thoth93@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: [bksvol-discuss] wish list request
> To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Date: Monday, October 27, 2008, 3:27 AM
> I post this separately from Cindy's wish list so 
> I can include the book description.  Several 
> folks in my meditation group like it a lot.
> 
> The Beautiful Soul of John Woolman, Apostle of Abolition
> by
> Thomas P. Slaughter
>  From Publishers Weekly
> Starred Review. Not many today know about the New 
> Jersey Quaker, mystic and social
> activist John Woolman (1720­1772). But William James, in
> The Varieties of Religious Experience
> , characterized Woolman as a saint. John 
> Greenleaf Whittier called him the founding
> father of the abolitionist movement. As Slaughter (
> The Whiskey Rebellion
> ) shows in this superb narrative, it may be 
> argued that the pious, simple-living
> Woolman—by rejecting not only slavery but also 
> the accumulation of wealth, economic
> exploitation of all kinds and all forms of 
> violence—created the prototype for every
> pacifist and nonconformist to come after. Woolman 
> always dressed simply in clothes
> he stitched himself, white clothes meant to mark 
> him as a man of God. He advocated
> his causes in lectures and sermons across the 
> eastern United States and England (where
> he died of smallpox) and through extensive 
> writings. He made a point of owning nothing
> he did not need and giving away every and 
> anything he could not use. In our own age
> of conspicuous consumption, the complex soul 
> Slaughter so ably and beautifully resurrects
> is full of contemporary relevance as an example of
> principled living.
> 
> Tom Slaughter has written a magnificent book about a unique
> American. The
> narrative is as gripping as a suspense story—and 
> simultaneously heartbreaking. I’ve
> read a lot about Woolman over the years, but 
> nothing can compare to the insights
> Slaughter offers here. What a beautiful book!” —Thomas
> Fleming, author of
> The Perils of Peace: America’s Struggle for Survival
> after Yorktown
> 
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