Description
About the Author
John S. Peart-Binns was born and brought up in Bradford and now lives with his wife Annis in Hebden Bridge in the South Pennines. He has written twenty biographies of Anglican bishops. His research has brought him a large collection of material relating to over 400 bishops (past and present) of the Church of England and of the other churches of the Anglican Communion, which now forms The Peart-Binns Episcopal Biography Archive at the University of Bradford.
Reviews
"This study of Hensley Henson is a splendid addition to the works of one who must surely be considered the doyen of biographers of modern Anglican leaders. Balanced and sensitive to subtlety in the complexities of Henson's changing opinions, Peart-Binns gives an honest assessment of a truly independent mind." Prof Edward Norman, former Canon Chancellor of York Minister and Emeritus Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge "I am enormously impressed. John S. Peart-Binns brings into sharp focus material that can only be gleaned by long toil through poring over lengthy biographies and other long out-of print sources. He sheds new light on issues that have been long forgotten." Prof Colin Brown, Senior Professor of Systematic Theology, Fuller Theological Seminary "Herbert Hensley Henson is John S. Peart-Binns's 20th episcopal biography, and sets the seal on his justly renowned achievement as a chronicler of the lives of Anglican bishops. His literary reputation may not be equal to that of Chadwick, but there is much in his life of Henson which will not be found in Chadwick's biography of 30 years ago. Peart-Binns can be read with profit as an admirable complement to Chadwick." Dr Bernard Palmer, in Church Times, 14 February 2014 "...The Author of this fine new biography has earned his spurs as the doyen of episcopal biographers... Peart-Binns' biography quotes deliciously waspish assessments of clerics and their foibles from his daily journal entries..." Brian Porter, The Melbourne Anglican, June 2014 "Mr. Peart-Binns has written a riveting portrayal of one of the most complex Church of England Bishops of the twentieth century. He probes with sympathy and imagination Henson's combination of contradiction and insight, and the work amounts to a fastidious contribution to a historical perspective of the contemporary Church of England." The Reverend Professor Stephen W. Sykes, Former Bishop of Ely (May 2014) "[Peart-Binns] research is heavily dependent on primary archival work which is demonstrated throughout. the writing style is readable and the chronology is easily followed [...] this book may interest people wanting an introduction to the church of England's history from the late Victorian era through to the end of World War II." Edward Loane, Churchman, Vol 128, Issue 3, (2014) "In this well-written biography...the author has produced a coherent and admirably accesible study of Henson." -John Maiden, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 66, 02 September 2015 "This book is a very good read. It is full of fascinating Church and wider English history, and the figure at the heart of it is a compelling, if not, always a comfortable or agreeable one." -Peter M. Waddell, Reviews in Religion & Theology, 22:3, 2015 "Peart-Binns brings us a fresh and distinctive view of Herbert Hensley Henson, the eighty-sixth Bishop of Durham.... This work will inform those interested in the social, political and ecclesiastical history of the period, and delight any who are intrigued by Hensley Henson's indomitable spirit." -Theological Book Review, Vol. 26 No. 2, 2015
Book Information
ISBN 9780718893026
Author John S. Peart-Binns
Format Paperback
Page Count 212
Imprint Lutterworth Press
Publisher James Clarke & Co Ltd
Weight(grams) 337g