Conversion narratives were one of the earliest forms of public expression for American women writers, sanctioned and indeed welcomed for their personal, first-hand testimonies about seasons of religious grace. Two eighteenth-century women, Sarah Pierpont Edwards and Sarah Prince Gill, wrote conversion narratives of remarkable craft and insight. These pieces, collected for the first time in The Silent and Soft Communion, represent two generations of Calvinist evangelism, addressing the social implications of spiritual regeneration and presenting full, fascinating accounts of Calvinist...
Conversion narratives were one of the earliest forms of public expression for American women writers, sanctioned and indeed welcomed for their persona...