Editorial Reviews -
American Christians and Islam
Heather J. Sharkey - Contemporary Islam
A key strength of American Christians and Islam is that it surveys a spectrum of American Christian and evangelical thought vis-à-vis Muslims across three centuries, and does so in a manner that is very clear, so that even a reader new to the subject could appreciate it. Assigned in a class on Middle Eastern or Islamic studies, this book would be guaranteed to stimulate lively debate.
Adam S. Francisco - Modern Reformation
As Islam continues its slow be steady growth in America, evangelicals of whatever strip would be wise to consult American Christians and Islam, particularly as they continue to seek ways to approach Islam with sobriety and faithfulness.
John T. Pawlikowski - Journal of Ecumenical Studies
Kidd has produced a gem of a book. It needs to find a high place on interreligious as well as public-policy bibliographies.
Sandra Tonies Keating - Touchstone
Thomas Kidd has done a great service with his publication of American Christians and Islam. Although there is an endless array of studies on various aspects of the relationships between Muslims and Christians throughout the past 1,400 years, this is, to my knowledge, the first to examine American Evangelical attitudes toward Islam. Kidd presents a vast amount of material in a clear, readable manner, and his book should be of interest to anyone trying to understand the extremely complex dynamic of contemporary Muslim-Christian relations.
Walter Russell Mead - Foreign Affairs
This concise and well-organized study offers readers an excellent summary of American popular attitudes toward Islam from the eighteenth century onward.
Anne Blue Wills - Christian Century
Offers an informative tonic that might move Christians in the U.S. beyond deeply embedded suspicions and into more hospitable encounters with Muslims at home and abroad.
Fr. Patrick Henry Reardon - Orthodoxy Today
Kidd's is a sympathetic and well-informed voice of sanity and Christian equanimity in the midst of this turmoil. His closing appeals to reason, civility, and charitable discourse could provide a better setting, I believe, for a fruitful mission to Islam. Otherwise, one fears what level of catastrophe may be required to discredit Dispensationalist craziness.
Edward E. Curtis IV - Journal of American History
This timely book about American Christian attitudes toward Islam and Muslims is a useful addition to the growing literature on Anglo-American engagements with Islam and Muslims since the colonial age. It is noteworthy primarily for its chronological range and its coverage of American missionaries to the Muslim world.
What People Are Saying
American Christians and Islam combines a timely subject, stylistic directness, and a broad scope to create an effective and useful historical survey of evangelical attitudes about Islam that is accessible to a wide audience. Kidd provides succinct readings and elucidates important patterns and shifts that offer readers a revealing overview of the engagements of U.S. evangelical culture with the Islamic world.
Timothy W. Marr, author of "The Cultural Roots of American Islamicism"
What People Are Saying
Before Thomas Kidd's magisterial work, American Christians and Islam, no scholar had traced the long and convoluted history of Muslim-Christian exchange in the American experience from colonial beginnings to the present. Kidd brings a deep understanding of both traditions to his analysis and brilliantly demonstrates how so many contemporary American denunciations of Islamespecially evangelical denunciationshave a rich history that goes all the way back to the Age of Exploration and the first English settlements.
Harry S. Stout, Yale University
What People Are Saying
A significant contribution to the field. There have been plenty of books on Western views of Islam, but none has focused exclusively or comprehensively on American Christian attitudes over such a long period. The scope and targeting of this book make it unique and pathbreaking.
Gerald R. McDermott, Roanoke College
What People Are Saying
Though its emergence as one of the central concerns of our time took the secular-minded by surprise, the friction between Christianity and Islamthe world's two largest and most energetically missionary faithsis nothing new in American history. As Thomas Kidd shows in this thoughtful and highly accessible account, the conflict runs like a thread through the American past. Knowing that history will provide us with valuable insights about the road aheadand about ourselves.
Wilfred M. McClay, University of Tennessee
What People Are Saying
American Christians and Islam gives historical perspective on a timely topic. Kidd provides a thorough examination of the prism through which American evangelicals have viewed Islam, a prism consisting of fears, challenges, and opportunities. He offers an important chapter in the story of American attitudes toward Muslims. This book fills a gap in the scholarship of American religious culture.
Frank Lambert, author of "Religion in American Politics"