From Library Journal
Main (history, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder) has written a fine book about family life in early New England that joins a long list of distinguished studies on the topic. Her thorough account of these studies grounds her own work, a sophisticated addition that looks at sexuality, courtship, marriage, childbirth, child rearing, childhood itself, old age, and other related topics. What's different, however, is that Main has woven in descriptions of Native American family life, which she contrasts to English practice, thus augmenting the usual historical sources with anthropological research. Generations of historians have shunned comparison as an organizing technique, but Main uses it here to great effect, which makes for good history as well as good general reading. The focus, however, is mainly on English colonials, attention on Native Americans being less well developed. This skilled study is nevertheless a graceful, scholarly book. Recommended for large public and all academic libraries. Bonnie Collier, Yale Law Lib.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
Main...has written a fine book about family life in early New England that joins a long list of distinguished studies on the topic. Her thorough account of these studies grounds her own work, a sophisticated addition that looks at sexuality, courtship, marriage, childbirth, child rearing, childhood itself, old age, and other related topics. What's different, however, is that Main has woven in descriptions of Native American family life, which she contrasts to English practice, thus augmenting the usual historical sources with anthropological research. Generations of historians have shunned comparison as an organizing technique, but Main uses it here to great effect, which makes for good history as well as good general reading...This skilled study is nevertheless a graceful, scholarly book. Recommended for large public and all academic libraries. (Bonnie Collier
Library Journal )
Gloria Main...offers a magisterial analysis of colonial New England society, literally from the ground up. Beginning with the region's environment, she draws on a vast array of studies and her own powerful research skills to paint an authoritative portrait of the struggles of daily life for colonists and Native Americans. For both groups, the family was the basic organizing unit of society. By focusing on family life, the author finds the key to understanding the society, culture, and economy of colonial New England...A rewarding read...[
Peoples of a Spacious Land] offer[s] readers a rich understanding of the society that played such a crucial role in the making of the United States. (Evan Haefeli
Washington Times )
Main's book depicts the New England family as an engine of growth that generated a multitude of industrious farmers and frugal artisans. Collectively, the New Englanders overcame their geographic handicap of settling a region with comparatively low agricultural yields...This is a thought-provoking, innovative work that deserves to be widely read by students of early American history. Immaculately produced by Harvard University Press, Main's findings will influence the research agendas of scholars working on colonial New England for some time to come. (S. D. Smith
Economic History Review )