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puritans
![The Price of Suffering: William Pynchon and The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/the-price-of-suffering-william-pynchon-and-the-meritorious-price-of-our-redemption/pynchon-thumb.png?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
The Price of Suffering: William Pynchon and The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption
William Pynchon, earliest colonial ancestor of the novelist Thomas Pynchon, was a key figure in the early settlement of New England. He also wrote a book which became, at the hands of the Puritans it riled against, one of the first to be banned and burned on American soil. Daniel Crown explores. more
![Lord of Misrule: Thomas Morton’s American Subversions](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/lord-of-misrule-thomas-mortons-american-subversions/maypole.jpeg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Lord of Misrule: Thomas Morton’s American Subversions
When we think of early New England, we tend to picture stern-faced Puritans and black-hatted Pilgrims, but in the same decade that these more famous settlers arrived, a man called Thomas Morton founded a very different kind of colony — a neo-pagan experiment he named Merrymount. Ed Simon explores the colony’s brief existence and the alternate vision of America it represents. more