'Compelling reading' - Alison Weir
'A fresh and admirably unsentimental account' - Peter Marshall
The voyage of the Mayflower in 1620 has come to typify those qualities
that many believe represent the best of America and the values it holds
up to the rest of the world. And yet, if they lived today, the
courageous men, women and children who made that journey would not
recognize themselves in the romantic retelling of their story in popular
books and movies of the last century or so.
So what were the motivating forces behind this momentous voyage? Derek
Wilson strips away the over-painting from the icon to discover the
complex range of religious, political and commercial concerns that led
this group of hopeful but fallible human beings to seek a new life on
the other side of the world.