"The Virginia Venture is a vigorous challenge to the common assumption that awareness of and involvement in Virginia colonization was largely limited to a small group of merchant promoters (adventurers) and nautical folk. Adding to the depth and vividness of this endeavor is Ewen's extensive use of much hitherto neglected archival material, not only in the metropolis but also in the towns and countryside of England. The result is a rich, though intentionally not exhaustive, account of how English men and women of all social ranks became aware of the colonial venture in Virginia and found themselves participating in it, sometimes against their will." (American Historical Review) "In The Virginia Venture, Misha Ewen breathes life into a long and tired conversation about early seventeenth-century English colonization and the Virginia Company, centering women's networks and motivations, the role of England's poor and marginalized, and conversations about colonization that ripped through smaller English communities....Ewen's reconstruction of networks, and the sheer variety of source material on a range of English people who leave differing im‐ pacts on the archive, is a testament to her skill. Her success also reminds us that there is still original and creative work left for us to do." (H-Early America) "[T]his excellent book provides a persuasive and well-supported argument that the idea of 'America permeatedEnglish society, from the humble hearthside of a rural laborer to the House of Commons.' By paying attention to English people traditionally excluded from narratives of the early empire, including women and the poor, and reading sources in capacious and creative ways, Ewen provides scholars with many ways to reconsider our understandings of early seventeenth-century England. The Virginia Venture is a welcome addition to historical scholarship that has long neglected the early 1600s as a period of imperial change." (The William and Mary Quarterly) "[A]n important and compassionate consideration of how ordinary people became caught up, and complicit, in 'the Virginia venture', offering a much-needed and deeply researched social history of colonisation and its effects on early modern England. One of its biggest strengths is the way it situates women within this topic, offering an integrated, relational look at colonialism across society. Like tobacco itself, colonisation—even when it ceased to be 'unfamiliar or strange'—could not be 'given up', and has been bound up with English life ever since." (The English Historical Review) "The Virginia colony, as Ewen deftly shows, was woven into the fabric of English daily life in the seventeenth century. Through diligent archival work and the creative combination of fragmentary information, Ewen illustrates that the colony in Virginia was a crucial outlet for parishes and criminal courts, an opportunity for those willing to adventure their purses, a means through which to express piety, and at times the subject of domestic unhappiness and tension. Whether for good or ill, Ewen shows that the Virginia venture, and similar projects that followed in its wake, could no longer be ignored. Life in England was infused by the colonial project, and English life influenced the progress of colonisation across the Atlantic." (Social History) "This colourful and well-researched study explores the relationship between England and its first American colony in its early years. It does this from the English perspective using a wide range of printed and manuscript sources: personal letters, ballads, sermons, broadsides, travel accounts, legal records, royal proclamations, petitions, and recipes explain how Virginia was incorporated into English everyday life....As the colonial enterprise brought 'texture and colour' to English society and imagination, so Ewen enriches our knowledge of this period of expanding horizons and shifting identities." (Family & Community History) "Based on impeccable archival research and rich in detailed illustrative material, The Virginia Venture presents a fascinating portrait of the myriad social and economic connections that shaped how people interpreted and intervened in the emergence of an English Atlantic. This beautifully written and crafted book makes a major contribution to the literature on English colonization in the first half of the seventeenth century." (James Horn, author of A Brave and Cunning Prince: The Great Chief Opechancanough and the War for America) "In this lucid, colorful and original study, Misha Ewen paints a portrait of early Virginia not just in relation to England but through it, from the perspective of the eastern side of the Atlantic. Many skillfully drawn vignettes of the everyday form a bigger picture in The Virginia Venture, demonstrating how extensively the colony lived in English consciousness and culture before it was fully viable, and how in the end this interest was crucial for its success." (Malcolm Gaskill, University of East Anglia)