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Killing the Witches: The Horror of Salem, Massachusetts

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With over 19 million copies in print and a remarkable record of #1 New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly bestsellers, Bill O'Reilly's Killing series is the most popular series of narrative histories in the world.

Killing the Witches revisits one of the most frightening and inexplicable episodes in American history: the events of 1692 and 1693 in Salem Village, Massachusetts. What began as a mysterious affliction of two young girls who suffered violent fits and exhibited strange behavior soon spread to other young women. Rumors of demonic possession and witchcraft consumed Salem. Soon three women were arrested under suspicion of being witches--but as the hysteria spread, more than 200 people were accused. Thirty were found guilty, twenty were executed, and others died in jail or their lives were ruined.

What really happened in Salem? Killing the Witches tells the horrifying story of a colonial town's madness, offering the historical context of similar episodes of community mania during that time, and exploring the evidence that emerged in the Salem trials, in contemporary accounts, and in subsequent investigations. The result is a compulsively readable book about good, evil, and how fear can overwhelm fact and reason.

291 pages, Hardcover

First published September 26, 2023

About the author

Bill O'Reilly

65 books3,019 followers
Bill O'Reilly's success in broadcasting and publishing is unmatched. The iconic anchor of The O'Reilly Factor led the program to the status of the highest rated cable news broadcast in the nation for sixteen consecutive years. His website BillOReilly.com is followed by millions all over the world.

In addition, he has authored an astonishing 12 number one ranked non-fiction books including the historical "Killing" series. Mr. O'Reilly currently has 17 million books in print.

Bill O'Reilly has been a broadcaster for 42 years. He has been awarded three Emmys and a number of other journalism accolades. He was a national correspondent for CBS News and ABC News as well as a reporter-anchor for WCBS-TV in New York City, among other high-profile jobs.

Mr. O'Reilly received two other Emmy nominations for the movies "Killing Kennedy" and "Killing Jesus."

He holds a history degree from Marist College, a master’s degree in Broadcast Journalism from Boston University, and another master’s degree from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Bill O'Reilly lives on Long Island where he was raised. His philanthropic enterprises have raised tens of millions for people in need and wounded American veterans.

http://us.macmillan.com/author/billor...

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,328 reviews
Profile Image for Lissa.
1,237 reviews130 followers
October 25, 2023
Woo boy, this book is a hot mess.

I mean, I can't say that I'm surprised, considering that Bill O'Reilly is a "coauthor" (I use that term quite loosely, because I'm sure he didn't write much except that disgusting "author's note.") And I know that the "Killing" series is history lite, and that's putting it kindly. These books are not targeted to people who actually know much of anything about the history of the events they purport to discuss.

I absolutely despise that this book is written in present tense. It feels weird and wrong to write supposed non-fiction (that is also putting it kindly) of historical events in present tense.

I don't know much about the Salem witch trials, but quite honestly, I am taking what is in this book with a grain of salt until I learn more about them, because there were SO MANY ERRORS in the American Revolution section (more on that later). This book needs a thorough fact checking, because it is quite obvious that no one bothered to do that.

And in spite of the subtitle ("The Horror of Salem, Massachusetts," which is really quite ironic, considering that I could definitely see ol' Billy Boy here screaming for the witches to be hung), only about 45% of the book actually deals with the Salem witch trials. I cannot comment on this section because, as I said, I do not have a lot of knowledge about them.

The next section of the book deals with the American Revolution and has NOTHING to do with the witch trials in Salem. The authors don't even try to link what happened in Salem to later events, except that Ben Franklin met one of the pathetic Mather preachers as a boy.

It is abundantly clear that the authors know very little about the American Revolution and do not care to learn beyond what their rudimentary education about the event taught them. The book is littered with glaring mistakes in this section. If I listed them all, I'd most likely run out of characters in this review before I even had the chance to get halfway close to finishing, so I'm just going to list a couple as examples of how BAD this book is when it comes to actual facts (but hey, Bill O'Reilly has never been big on THOSE now, has he?).

Crispus Attucks is killed first...The firing continues. Five more Bostonians are shot dead within seconds. - page 200 in the hardcover


Oh good lord.

So this has to do with the event that became known as the Boston Massacre, and huge surprise, these chucklefucks got it all wrong. FIVE people ended up dying. FIVE. Not six. FIVE. How in the hell did they get the number of people killed wrong?

And they were not all "shot dead within seconds." Samuel Maverick was mortally wounded in the belly and died the next morning (March 6, 1770). Patrick Carr had it even worse; he also received a mortal stomach wound and didn't die until March 14, 1770.

The authors spend a great deal of time trying to make King George III the new "devil" and stating how much American colonists disliked him. Ha. Haha. Hahahahahahaha. If they had bothered to pick up a single book about the Revolution that was fact-checked (unlike their own shoddy excuse for a book), they'd realize that a vast number of colonists LIKED the king. Many pinned the blame of the unpopular acts (ie. the Stamp Act, the Sugar Act, the Intolerable Acts, etc) on PARLIAMENT and wrote NUMEROUS petitions BEGGING the king to step in and help out the colonists. Even after shots were fired in Lexington and Concord, there was a spirit of "hey, this doesn't HAVE to mean a huge break with England, we like the king, this was just a way for us to get his attention about what is really happening over here." Read up on the Olive Branch Petition if you don't believe me - it was adopted by Congress on July 5, 1775 and declared their loyalty to the crown and how this didn't have to be a permanent rift. They still considered themselves to be English - AFTER Lexington and Concord!

So yeah, history isn't such a neat little package like these two authors are trying to portray.

Speaking of neat little packages, it is still hotly contested and debated today about what exactly was said between the colonists and British soldiers under Captain Preston's command, but these two idiots act like they have all the answers that scholars don't. LOL

The last section of the book has to do with the Exorcist, and Jesus H. Christ, why is this included in the book? Why was most of this book even written? It felt like a bunch of disjointed articles slapped together with no rhyme or reason.

Besides the obvious factual errors, what really burned me was the absolute disgusting author's note that O'Reilly put at the end. He defends J. K. Rowling for "promoting traditional gender" and criticizes "trans fanatics" for speaking out against her gross transphobia. And he also tries to defend Roseanne Barr and compares "cancel culture" to the witch hunts in Salem. LMFAO.

Oh Billy Boy, here's the thing sweetie: it isn't cancel culture. It's something called ACCOUNTABILITY. Do or say something disgusting, and you have to face some damn consequences for it. But heaven forbid that there are CONSEQUENCES, right? We all need to brush what the racists and misogynists and homophobes say under the rug and let them blather on all they want without pushing back, apparently.

And you do NOT get to compare racists who have to face the consequences of their actions and words to INNOCENT MURDER VICTIMS.

Fuck anyone who thinks this way. :D

This is a library book and I am SERIOUSLY tempted to toss it in the bin and pay the fine to replace it, except I know that they'll just buy another copy of this flaming dumpster fire of a book. Sigh.
Profile Image for Mike Lewis.
1,670 reviews2 followers
October 1, 2023
45% of the book was about the Salem witch trials it was very interesting and what I was interested in. The second 45% of the book was basically a story about the founding fathers the 13 original colonies and the rise to independence. The last 10% of the book was about the original story That inspired the book in the movie the exorcist. While all of it was interesting and worth reading. I was disappointed that only the first 45% approximately was actually about the Salem witch trials. The epilogue and wrapup of the book mentioned how throughout history and even in today’s world That the world is on a witchhunt in Safari as our council culture social justice and other issues going on in the world. Once again it was all interesting but I wish the entire book was about the Salem Witch trials and more information about that in general.
Profile Image for Jackie McGuire.
3 reviews3 followers
October 9, 2023
I just HAD to write a review on this one because it was the most random book I have ever read. It's pretty much split into three parts:
1). The Salem Witch Trials (as advertised!)
2). An extension of Killing England and all about the Founding Fathers (random)
3). The History of the movie "The Exorcist" (also very random)

I really enjoyed the first third of the book, which was what I intended to read about- the rest was just random filler and detracted from the narrative as a whole. I also found that the book was incredibly non-linear, hopping around tangentially from thought to thought. I am a big fan of historical narratives but this is just not cutting it.
Profile Image for Terre Arena.
153 reviews1 follower
October 13, 2023
Should’ve been titled “Killing Five Hours of My Time” (I should have given up after 3). The authors give you the Cliff’s Notes version of the Salem witch trials in a couple of chapters and next thing you know, you’re in Philadelphia with Ben Franklin. There are literally hundreds of excellent books out there about Salem. Keep looking, cuz this isn’t one of them.
Profile Image for Brooke Nelson.
Author 2 books476 followers
January 2, 2024
"I am no more a witch than you are a wizard.
And if you take away my life, God will give you blood to drink."


And so begins the fascinating first half of this book.

I am thoroughly impressed with the writing and information presented throughout the first half. It focuses solely on the witch trials themselves and the people most closely involved.

The second half takes a bit of a turn, moving onto the lasting effects of the trials and the ways in which the lessons learned (or not learned) helped the founders build America. This part I found a bit longwinded, and I wonder if perhaps the publisher insisted on a particular page count and that is why it ended up going off on this track.

The end of the book comes back to modern witchcraft and black magic, witch-hunts, exorcisms, and modern-day Salem, which I think is very fitting.

Regardless, as someone who already knows quite a bit about the trials, I did overall enjoy the book. I would have made it a little shorter (lol) but I enjoyed it.

My Blog | My YA Thrillers | Linktree | Instagram | YouTube
Profile Image for Susan.
71 reviews22 followers
July 17, 2023
This felt like the lightning round of facts about the Salem Witch Trials. It was a fairly easy read but it was just so all over the place. Once history had moved far enough along to get beyond the trials it became a history lesson about the founders of our country and their push towards the Declaration of Independece. Finally a strange final telling of demonic possession. I can see the effort to bring it all back around but I was just glad to get to the last page and put it away. This was an advanced reader copy….I’m not really sure how all of that works. There were blank pages where images will be inserted before the final printing I guess. Hope it goes through another round of editing too. Lots of errors. I’ve read other books on the Salem Witch Trials that I found much more interesting but if you like your facts fast and furious you might give this a try!
Profile Image for Kylie B.
8 reviews3 followers
October 30, 2023
If you are at all versed in the Salem witch trials or even just aware of them at all, stay far far away from this book as it is an abhorrent mess. The chronology of the small section actually about the Salem witch trials jumps back and forth in a way that doesn’t make much sense. It feels odd and a bit suspicious that the title of this book is “Killing the Witches” and yet maybe 30% of the book is about the Salem witch trials. Additionally, the writers of this book make bold assertions about how individuals such as Tituba or the afflicted felt and it ignores a lot of the information or lack thereof in previous texts and documents to support some of the claims made such as motives for accusations. This entire book feels like a weird contrived justification for the ridiculous and unsurprising author’s note at the end. It is ironic that a man affiliated with a party that often uses religion as justification for condemnation/persecution of others has chosen to utilize one of the most infamous examples of using religion to condemn and persecute others all to try to say he/his party is the one being “witch hunted”.
Profile Image for Raymond .
76 reviews73 followers
June 23, 2024
This book is just a hot mess. The first half of the book was relevant & a pretty good read. There were many interesting stories relating to the witch trials of Salem. However, in the second half of the book the author started focusing on the founding fathers of America, the pirates of the 18th century, & the movie Excorcist. Seriously, huh? The title of this book was really misleading. All the stuff in the book on the war between the colonists & the British crown was already covered in Killing England, Bill O’Reilly’s earlier book. Maybe Bill was drunk when he wrote this entry of the Killing series, lol. This is easily the author’s worst book to date.
Profile Image for Greg Kopstein.
467 reviews5 followers
October 5, 2023
As a huge fan of the series, I was so ready to read this that I preordered it and got the audiobook. And it was good… until it wasn’t.

It’s easiest to describe in 3 parts:
1: Salem
2: Revolutionary War America
3: The Exorcist

Part 1 was excellent! I learned a lot about Salem and I even rented The Crucible. It was an excellent read about puritans and witches, the trials, the Mayflower, and societal hysteria. So good!

Part 2 made no sense. It had nothing to do with Salem and nothing to do with witches or hysteria. It felt like they had a section of leftover stuff from Killing England and they threw it in here as a filler. It was neither appropriate in them nor interesting. A waste of time and it ruined the book.

Part 3 about the Exorcist was good - eerily so.had goosebumps the whole time. I had no idea it was based on a true story or how intense and graphic the real event was. (I’ve also never read the book or seen the movie).

This book had the capacity to be great but it seems like the authors got lazy or lacked focus. They should have done McCarthyism and the Red Scare and modern cancel culture. They talk about it in the epilogue but I guess they lacked the conviction or willingness to finish it. Instead, we got a 2nd part that was unimaginative and unrelated, leftover work at best and unfocused at worst.

All in all, Parts 1 and 3 made it worthwhile and I don’t regret it. But it’s incomplete and merely a stepping stone to further books on the subject.
75 reviews4 followers
September 30, 2023
I really liked this book. It reads like a Stephen King horror novel, only it’s true. Salem, Mass. 1692, pre-teen and teenage girls start accusing townspeople of being witches. Mainly women at first. They are tried by Judges and jurors of MEN. Women were hung. Then the men started accusing local townsmen of witchcraft, because they covet their land holdings. 20 citizens end up being hanged. This was all sanctioned by the Puritan Angelica Church. The second part of the book follows our Founding Fathers as they begin to free us from British rule and design our country. A wonderful refresher on our American history. So many parallels on our past and present. How accusations can ruin people’s lives with no proof. Should be required reading in schools.

+
Profile Image for Vickie.
235 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2024
So this one is tough to rate. I totally get what the negative reviewers are saying. The title is a little misleading in the fact that the whole book does not cover the Salem witch trials. Only the first half of the book is about that topic. I'd say the book as a whole is more about religion and beliefs and how extreme those things can become. So if you're looking for a book solely on the Salem witch trials, read other books instead (or just read the first half of this one, lol). I did enjoy reading about the witch trials and also about the basis of The Exorcist and how the book and movie came to be. But my biggest complaint and why I just cannot go above 3⭐ (which I really struggled between 2 and 3) is that the authors do not have any Sources page (or Bibliography). They don't even have a photo credits page. I don't understand how that can be, how the editor(s) and publisher allowed that. I looked through previous Killing books, and they have those pages at the end. Not sure how it was missed here. Heck, even the one photo of the priest, William Bowdern is spelled incorrectly (William Bowden). Just terrible.
Profile Image for Timothy Boyd.
6,897 reviews46 followers
March 11, 2024
Another good read in this series. Very well researched and written. Recommendd
Profile Image for Rebecca.
130 reviews11 followers
December 7, 2023
Disappointing to be honest. For a book named after and advertised as about the Salem Witch Trials, that only took up half the story. It was also information that is widely known…. So I really learnt nothing new.

The third quarter was all about Benjamin Franklin and what he was doing and then somehow changed again about a quarter from the end and gave the story of the boy who inspired the book and movie The Exorcist 🤷🏼‍♀️

In the Author’s Note, they tried to bring everything together by mentioning certain “modern witch trials”, i.e. JK Rowling’s cancellation due to her comments we are currently all aware of, among a few other people.

I think this was a backward way of attempting to tie the end half of the book to the first half. But everything failed miserably.
Profile Image for Debbie.
337 reviews3 followers
October 18, 2023
I’ve known about the Salem witch trials, but O’Reilly has researched and explained it all in one book. I was shocked and amazed at what happened due to unreliable accusations. The last part of the book is about the colonies break from England, the fight for religious freedom, and the Constitution. There’s also a chapter of the basis for The Exorcist.
For all the info to be learned from this book, the most important quotes are found in the Author’s Note at the end…
“ Today there is a new kind of witch hunt. Accusations mean guilt. The press drives that every day. No one is executed, but lives are ruined in terrible ways. And there is no forgiveness for actual transgressions. The cancel culture makes sure of that. Demonization has cast a terrible fear across the land.”
I’ve never read truer words. Instead of endlessly watching the news, do your own research and don’t buy into the media hype.
January 14, 2024
How? HOW was this allowed to be published and printed as is?

The first 144 pages, WERE indeed about the Salem Witch Trials, and were well-written, thought-provoking, and all served as informative take on a subject most know very little about.

Then, it felt as if writers O'Reilly and Duggard said, "OH shit! Are we done already? This thing has to be longer! Fuck it! Let's just talk about Young Ben Franklin for the next 100 pages. Yeah that'll work."

Then said, "God damn it! This thing still isn't long enough! Let's talk about exorcism for 60 pages."

Meanwhile, I and millions of others are left feeling as though we've been possibly trolled.
Profile Image for Christina DeVane.
411 reviews45 followers
January 25, 2024
Fascinating read! Only about 100 pages are about the actual witch trials as he adds in so much history leading up to them, then after telling how religion continued to shape government and policies.

The witch trials of 1692 are rather horrific as over 200 people were imprisoned and 20 hung because they would not admit they were a witch. Young girls claimed they were tormented by these people’s ghosts and the girls would convulse and thrash during the trials.

The book doesn’t talk much about why these girls were doing this, but some say they were suffering from hysteria and no one knew how to deal with it. They just believed the girls and what they said about these ghosts.

It wasn’t only women accused of being witches, some men were hung too. Women in their 70s were accused down to a 4yr old girl being hung for this! 😭😭

Several Puritan preachers were very openly supportive of the trials causing even more damage. It wasn’t until the governor’s wife was accused of being a witch that the governor stepped in and stopped the trials!

I learned so many nuggets of other history that I so enjoyed! Much of it related to separation of church and state and how that came to be.

On the Mayflower a man went overboard, but grabbed a rope. He was narrowly rescued and survived the voyage and his descendants included George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush.

Benjamin Franklin and George Whitfield were friends and business partners. Whether Franklin ever accepted Christ is questionable but Whitfield continually implored him to.

Patrick Henry wanted to make Christianity the state religion, but thankfully that didn’t go through. Henry and James Madison disagreed heatedly over many things.

The part about the exorcist was a little creepy, but very interesting and believable. The book and movie are based on the real life experiences of a teenage boy who became demon-possessed. I personally believe in that spirit world as I’ve heard too many stories to think otherwise. Satan and his demons are very much at work in this world. Am I going to read the book or watch the movie? Absolutely not.☺️
At the end he calls our current cancel culture as our modern day witch hunt. Was a bit of a stretch.

There is some language in quotes.
So glad I read this and would recommend for any history reader!
Profile Image for Cari Legere.
63 reviews
February 5, 2024
I originally thought this wasn't bad. However, once I got past the ACTUAL Salem Witch Trials, I was left wondering, "SO WHAT IN THE WORLD DOES THE US REVOLUTION HAVE TO DO WITH THIS?!" Sure, I read it, but it's not what I expected. The present-tense writing style wasn't my favorite either. And then we get the most random part of all: the real-life story of The Exorcist. It was cool, yes, but very random. It felt as if O'Reilly went, "Hey, y'know what? This isn't long enough, so why don't we throw in the true story of The Exorcist?"

The worst part? I used to listen to Bill O'Reilly on the radio, and I heard him shamelessly promote his Killing books as if they were the best history books ever written. As a history buff, I automatically thought, "I need to give these a try!" He especially talked about Killing the Witches. I've always been interested in the Salem Witch Trials, so I asked for a copy. Well, I received my copy, and I felt like I'd been ripped off when I finished it. I bet I could've found out more from the Internet—and that's saying something.

So, in case y'all are wondering, it's okay, but not worth the 20 bucks. Get it used or from the library if you want to give it a try.
Profile Image for Janine.
651 reviews12 followers
January 23, 2024
Ok, so this book is called Killing the Witches, but while the first two hours were about Salem, the following five are about Ben Franklin and the Founding Fathers with some mentions of “oh look at this connection to Salem,” and concluding with the backstory of demonic possession and The Exorcist. Let’s not forget that in his Author’s Note O’Reilly casually remarks on the connections to modern “witch hunts” and “cancel culture” (of which he himself has been subjected to). Don’t say this book is about Salem and the witch hunts when you give that time period a visceral treatment at best. Boy, bye.
35 reviews3 followers
October 1, 2023
Very comprehensive and thought provoking. Links the witch hunts to modern times.
Profile Image for Natalie.
25 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2023
Only half of the book is on the Salem Witch Trials. The Author's Note is asinine.
Profile Image for Rob Baker.
301 reviews9 followers
June 15, 2024
2.25 stars overall, though this is really 3-½ books, so I’ll discuss and rate each separately, too.

“Book 1”, the first 144 of the 280 pages, concerns what the title promises: the Salem Witch Trials. Having read a few other books on this topic (Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, Shirley Jackson’s The Witchcraft of Salem Village, and Anne Rinaldi’s young-adult novel A Break with Charity), I was interested to see what this might add to my understanding of it.

This “history lite” has many fascinating factoids about the events and people, what happened along the way, and what became of the accusers after it became widely realized that the trials really were a total sham. One of the book's afterwords fills the reader in on what Salem is like today.

On the downsides, the authors don’t give all their sources; the chronology is sometimes messy, jumping confusingly around in time; and the writing often feels overly simplistic.

Section 1 gets 3 stars I’d recommend reading this section and skipping the rest (except maybe the third part if you have an interest in its topic).

The second “book” somewhat jarringly begins with a few chapters about the early life of Benjamin Franklin. He was an interesting dude, so it wasn’t boring, just not what I signed up for. Then follows an American History 101 overview of the years leading up to and away from the American Revolution. I guess the connection is that some of the Founding Fathers fought for religious freedom, while some wanted government-mandated religions, like the Puritans had. There are other occasional, very oblique references back to the witch trials, but they seem thrown in just to give the illusion that this is part of the same book, when really it is not.

Section 2 gets 2 stars.

The final full section of the book jumps forward to 1947 Maryland and the alleged demonic possession of 13-year-old Ronald Hunkeler, whose story is the basis for The Exorcist. This was actually kind of interesting because I didn’t know anything about that or the writing of the book/film. It’s not really clear, however, how this all connects to the Salem Witch Trials since the whole point of that history is to show that people were wrongly accused of colluding with Satan and of being witches, and this section treats the demonic possession as if it is true. Entirely different ideas. It did make me want to watch the movie again 🙂 👿

Section 3 gets 3 stars.

The first Afterword tries to connect the trials to modern “witch hunts”, media attacks on people whose lives and careers are often destroyed, just as happened with the alleged witches of Salem. While there is some truth to the idea of “death by media persecution”, the examples given and the discussion in general feel over-simplified, and its inclusion in a book about the Salem Witch Trials is a stretch.

This Afterword gets 1 star
Profile Image for Kristina M..
2 reviews1 follower
October 31, 2023
This book was an absolute disappointment. I teach The Crucible, so I was excited to learn even more actual history than I already know. A third of the way through the book that ended, and I was back in US History class/watching Hamilton and then segued into The Exorcist. Where were the transitions? Why was it called Killing the Witches when that was only one-third of the book? I’m perplexed…
Profile Image for Anna Riley.
26 reviews
November 14, 2023
This has been my favorite non-fiction book I've read in a long time. I actually feel like I learned a lot of facts that I either don't remember from school-or was never taught. It held my attention and I read it in one day!
Profile Image for Deacon Tom F.
2,272 reviews183 followers
May 17, 2024
I’ve never read a Bill O’Reilly history book that I didn’t enjoy – – until now!

It seems to me that Bill‘s publisher made a huge mistake, merging a witches book with a revolutionary war book. If that is not the case, then I might even take the second star away.

Swing and a miss!

Will wait till the next one and hope he’s back to his normal standard of writing
Profile Image for Cat Rutherford.
37 reviews
January 16, 2024
Very very interesting read. For those who love American history and the witch trials this is 100% the read for you. I enjoyed the deep dive into the witch trials themselves and then in the back half of the book it goes into more detail about how the trials shaped America and our constitution. I didn’t realize the lingering impact the trials had on the nation long after they were done.
1 review1 follower
October 23, 2023
This book is full of information and detail. A very interesting read.
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