New England Women Writers, Secularity, and the Federalist Politics of Church and State is a genuinely significant contribution to the study of women writers, early debates over religion and secularity, and the enduring nature of a supposedly dead political tradition. Moreover, it spotlights several underappreciated texts worthy of further study and highlights an era of literary history that is often squeezed into obscurity between the turbulent 1790s and the "American Renaissance." Murphy should thus be heartily applauded for digging deep into what is often mischaracterized as a shallow period of literary history.