Diarmaid MacCulloch is a fellow of St. Cross College, Oxford, and professor of the history of the church at Oxford University. His books include Suffolk and the Tudors, winner of the Royal Historical Society’s Whitfield Prize, and Thomas Cranmer: A Life, which won the Whitbread Biography Prize, the James Tait Black Prize, and the Duff Cooper Prize. A former Anglican deacon, he has presented many highly celebrated documentaries for television and radio, and was knighted in 2012 for his services to scholarship. He lives in Oxford, England.
Praise for Christianity
“Immensely ambitious and absorbing.”
—Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker
“A landmark contribution . . . It is difficult to imagine a more
comprehensive and surprisingly accessible volume than
MacCulloch’s.”
—Jon Meacham, The New York Times Book Review
“A prodigious, thrilling, masterclass of a history book. MacCulloch
is to be congratulated for his accessible handling of so much
complex, difficult material.”
—John Cornwell, Financial Times
“A tour de force: it has enormous range, is gracefully and wittily
written, and from page one holds the attention. Everyone who reads
it will learn things they didn’t know.”
—Eamon Duffy, author of Saints and Sinners
“MacCulloch brings an insider’s wit to tracing the fate of official
Christianity in an age of doubt, and to addressing modern surges of
zeal, from Mormons to Pentecostals.”
—The Economist
“A triumphantly executed achievement. This book is a landmark in
its field, astonishing in its range, compulsively readable, full of
insight even for the most jaded professional and of illumination
for the interested general reader. It will have few, if any, rivals
in the English language.”
—Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
“A well-informed and—bless the man—witty narrative guaranteed to
please and at the same time displease every single reader, if
hardly in identical measure. . . . The author’s prose style is
fluent, well-judged, and wholly free of cant. . . . You will shut
this large book with gratitude for a long and stimulating
journey.”
—The Washington Times
“A tour de force . . . The great strength of the book is that it
covers, in sufficient but not oppressive detail, huge areas of
Christian history which are dealt with cursorily in traditional
accounts of the subject and are unfamiliar to most English-speaking
readers. . . . MacCulloch’s analysis of why Christianity has taken
root in Korea but made such a hash in India is perceptive and his
account of the nineteenth-century missions in Africa and the
Pacific is first-rate and full of insight. . . . The most brilliant
point of this remarkable book is its identification of the U.S. as
the prime example of the kind of nation the reformers hoped to
create.”
—Paul Johnson, The Spectator
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