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HATFIELD 1677 by Laura C. Rader

HATFIELD 1677

by Laura C. Rader

Pub Date: May 21st, 2024
ISBN: 9798885280778
Publisher: Acorn Publishing

In Rader’s 17th-century-set drama, an English settler in the New World attempts to rescue his wife, who has been kidnapped by Indigenous people.

In the 1670s, war breaks out between English settlers who are arriving in the New World in increasing number and the River Indians who have been dispossessed of their land, led by Metacomet, whom the English dub King Philip. Benjamin Waite, who lives in Hatfield (part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony) with his wife Martha and his three daughters, is reluctantly drawn into the conflict and marches off to attack a neighboring Indian village—to his great horror, his band massacres the mostly defenseless natives, including women and children, in a grotesque slaughter chillingly captured by the author. “I wiped away hot tears and sweat from my face with my gloved hand. Men torched wigwams and watched them burn. The mighty river swept people and canoes over the falls, and the white water sparkled in the sun, mocking the horror.” In a cataclysm of retaliation, the River Indians raid Hatfield while the men are working in the fields and kidnap Martha and her daughters. Overwhelmed by fear and grief, and not even sure who is responsible, Ben attempts to organize a search party and retrieve his family before it is too late. Rader paints a stirring picture with the subtlest of brush strokes—this is no simplistic struggle between good and evil. Both sides have earned the right to some grievances, and both commit unspeakable atrocities. Martha, in particular, is an impressively drawn character, deep and complex; she is horrified, even while in captivity, by the terrible things Ben has done to her captors. The conclusion of the book may strike some readers as a bit tidy and even sentimental, but, overall, this is a moving work, dramatically compelling and historically searching.

An engrossing novel that challenges stale narratives of colonial America.