This finely researched project is a gold mine for students of New England church history. . . . One of the best compendia of New England social history to appear in many years. . . . Students of the region will be building on its findings for decades to come."" - Douglas Sweeney, Jonathan Edwards Center at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School""An absolute must-read for students, scholars, pastors, and laypeople who care about the legacy of the Great Awakening."" - The Gospel Coalition""Essential reading for students of early American 'evangelicalism.'"" - John Turner, Patheos""By parsing the distinctive vocabularies and rich tropes that ordinary New Englanders devised to describe their tumult within, [Winiarski] lends freshness and immediacy to the familiar narrative of the Awakening."" -Christine Heyrman, in Reviews in American History""[Winiarski] weaves together biographies of believers seeking spiritual refreshment and by turns finding in New England's established religion a font of joy or an empty, arid, and spiritless desert. Essential."" - Choice""Admirably models how the methods and gaze of lived religion can expand and humanize well established narratives."" - Reading Religion""[T]he most compelling history of the Awakening in New England we have. . . . Nowhere else in studies of religious practice in early America is social behavior so thoroughly mapped. And nowhere else have vernacular descriptions of religious experience been so acutely analyzed."" - David D. Hall, in Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture""Winiarski brings new life to eighteenth-century religion. Perhaps as significantly, he sets a high bar for the use of compelling narrative and imaginative prose in the writing of early American history . . . [T]hrough his expert presentation of lived experience, he has at last made the stories of the awakened as compelling as those of the awakeners."" - Peter Manseau, in Journal of the American Academy of Religion