"Packed with Indigenous culture and customs and sprinkled with tribal terminology, the narrative is vivid, magnetic, and chilling. The author is herself a Patawomeck descendant, and she's combined scant available written records with tribal oral history to inform her creation of two emotionally powerful, vibrant female protagonists....plenty of action, tears, cheers, and historical detail work to keep the pages turning. A disturbing, absorbing, and valuable addition to the literature of cruelty inflicted upon Indigenous peoples." -Kirkus Reviews
"Lora Chilton's 1666: A Novel is an historically accurate, horrific, moving chronicle of the devastation wrought on the indigenous population by white settlers in early America. The author manages to take large dollops of shocking history and fashion them into a narrative that moves like a chilling wind. The story is a tragedy, of course, but in Chilton's sure hands, it transcends the horrors, and the name of this transcendence is Art." –Corey Mesler, author of Memphis Movie, and The World is Neither Stacked For Nor Against You: Selected Stories
"With meticulous research, Lora Chilton's 1666: A Novel, brings to life the forgotten and tragic story of women who survived a disgraceful chapter in our melting-pot history. Following them from Virginia and the birth of the 'New World, ' to Barbados, eventually back to their lost homelands, you cannot help but mourn the lost opportunity early settlers had to collaborate rather than annihilate." –Molly Caldwell Crosby, author of The American Plague, and The Great Pearl Heist
"In this debut novel by Lora Chilton, 1666: A Novel, we are introduced to a history based account of two brave Indigenous women of the Patawomeck tribe, who are abducted from their native Virginia home in 1666 and enslaved under the brutal 'Master' and 'Mistress' of the plantations in Barbados. A page-turning marvel of a historical novel! Otherwise, the shameful erasure of the Patawomeck would have been maintained." –Diana Y. Paul, author of Things Unsaid
"Focusing on the experiences of three Patawomeck women in the latter half of the seventeenth century, Chilton, in 1666: A Novel, draws on contemporary scholarship regarding Patawomeck and Virginia Algonquian history, culture, and language to develop her characters and add depth to their stories. It is refreshing to read a story about Virginia Indian women in the seventeenth century that avoids the glamorized, sexualized, and racialized Pocahontas mythology and instead centers on the experiences of those everyday people who may not have been so well-known to colonizers but are the true ancestors of most Virginia Indians.... A fast-paced novel that takes the reader through numerous Atlantic landscapes from the traditional Patawomeck homelands along Potomac Creek, to Barbados, to New York, 1666 illustrates the interconnectedness of the early Modern world and its people." –Dr. Brad Hatch, Patawomeck Tribal Historian and Tribal Council Member
"Beautifully written, 1666: A Novel tells a story that needs to be told...this is a story of the survival of our best selves over our worst." –Dr. Barbara U. Prescott, co-author of My Heart Got Married and I Didn't Know It
"History is usually written by the conquerors, so it is said to be HIS-story!... 1666: A Novel, an often raw and gritty work of historical fiction, describes the resilience and tenacity