“One could not wish for a more engaging introduction to the history of the Prayer Book. . . . [A] triumph of compression and lucidity.”<b>—David Martin, <i>Church Times</i></b>
“Elegant and authoritative.”<b>—Willy Maley, <i>Times Higher Education</i></b>
“[A] gem.”<b>—Peter J. Leithart, <i>First Things</i></b>
“A beautifully lucid introduction to the origins and use of one of the most significant religious texts in the English-speaking world. Alan Jacobs helps us to understand not only the book but also the Christian sensibility of the whole Anglican tradition and the culture it nourished.”<b>—Dr. Rowan Williams, Magdalene College, University of Cambridge</b>
“<i>The Book of Common Prayer</i>, often thought of as a source of Anglican stability, has led an interesting life of many changes. Jacobs tracks them all like a shrewd detective.”<b>—Garry Wills, author of <i>What the Gospels Meant</i></b>