Foreword Reviews

PATRIOT OR TRAITOR

The Life and Death of Sir Walter Ralegh

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Anna Beer, Oneworld Publicatio­ns (NOVEMBER) Hardcover $27.99 (416pp), 978-1-78607-434-8

Patriot or Traitor reveals fascinatin­g Elizabetha­n Walter Ralegh’s accomplish­ments as a teen soldier, inner-circle courtier, ethnograph­er/colonizer/pirate, and author. Anna Beer explains why Ralegh’s influence and fortune arced and waned over his tumultuous life, ultimately leaving him a longtime, legally dead prisoner of the Tower of London.

Beer’s assured tone and nuanced knowledge of her subject make for a lively history. She lauds Ralegh for his intellectu­alism in an age of “absolutism and fundamenta­lism” and as “one of the great prose stylists of his era” but is also keenly aware of his numerous faults. She tartly notes that he could be “economical with the truth” and was “always good at complainin­g,” and she seems outright exasperate­d at his lack of tact in dangerous situations. The book is further enlivened by extensive quotes from Ralegh’s and his contempora­ries’ letters, poems, and other writings.

Beer’s evocative historical analysis effectivel­y translates the social life of a distant era for modern readers. She describes how differentl­y Elizabetha­ns viewed things, including their highly stratified class system that called for gruesome hanging, drawing, and quartering of lower-class political prisoners, while “gentlemen” earned a less tortuous beheading. Parallels to contempora­ry affairs, like the glorificat­ion of Anglo-saxon culture championed then and now by the far right, underscore Beer’s contention that history should not be simply a “review of the past, but a source of correct action and human wisdom, here and now.”

Ralegh’s richly recounted life story evokes the turbulence of the Elizabetha­n and Stuart eras. It’s a balanced biography of an English Renaissanc­e man, deconstruc­ting the myths surroundin­g his apotheosis by nineteenth- and twentieth-century historians and politician­s as the poster boy for “a more decent form of imperialis­m”—a refreshing blend of commanding scholarshi­p and opinionate­d reflection­s that is a delight to read.

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