This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
Sayings of Margaret Fox a Little before Her Departure out of this World.”


Friends United Press, 1992, 142 pp., paperback $11.00


Undaunted Zeal The Letters of Margaret Fell edited by Elsa Glines, foreword by Rosemary Moore


Margaret Fell was the person to whom everyone in early Quakerdom wrote, at Swarthmore Hall, the home she had shared with George Fox. Here collected for the first time are the letters she wrote in reply. Her clear letters are a wonderful picture of early Quakerism and the glue that bound it together through the early years. Each letter is preceded with a summary giving biographical details and elucidat- ing points that modern readers may find difficult to understand. Introductory essays set the scene for the period in which she wrote.


Friends United Press, 2003, 509 pp., paperback $35.00 James Nayler


Selections from the Writings of James Nayler Second edition, with additional excerpts


and revised introduction edited by Brian Drayton


A selection of writings from Nayler’s letters, pastoral writings and epistles. Includes Nayler’s last testimony written two hours before his death (“There is a spirit which I feel, that delights to do no evil”) and a biographical sketch. Includes “The Lamb’s War.”


New England Yearly Meeting, 2001, 79 pp., paperback $8.50


The Works of James Nayler Volume 1 / Volume 2 / Volume 3 / Volume 4 by James Nayler, edited by Licia Kuenning Each volume available. See details at www.quakerbooks.org $25.00 each volume


James Nayler Revolutionary to Prophet by David Neelon


The definitive study of one of the earliest leaders of the Quaker movement. Along with George Fox and the “Valiant Sixty,” Nayler’s itinerant ministry helped gather seekers after the mid-17th Century civil wars in England. Presents for the first time, a full account of Nayler’s life.


Leading, 2009, 216 pp., cloth $35.95 (reduced from suggested retail price of $39.95)


William Penn


No Cross, No Crown by William Penn, edited by Ronald Selleck


Outlining a life of discipleship in Christ, William Penn addresses such topics as “bearing the cross daily,” the nature of worship, and our inner character. Selleck’s modern English translation makes this classic (written in 1668) easily readable in the 21st century.


Friends United Press, 2007, 156 pp., paperback $16.00 29 QUAKERBOOKS AUTUMN 2011


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