<p>Published in 1997 Terryl Givens&#39;s <em>The Viper on the Hearth</em> was widely praised as a landmark work--indeed <em>The Wall Street Journal</em> hailed it as &quot;one of the five best books on Mormonism.&quot; Now in the wake of a tidal wave of Mormon-inspired artistic literary and political activity--ranging from the Broadway hit <em>The Book of Mormon</em> to the HBO series <em>Big Love</em> to the political campaign of Mitt Romney--Givens presents an updated edition that addresses the continuing presence and reception of the Mormon image in contemporary culture.</p><p><em>The Viper on the Hearth</em> showed how nineteenth- and twentieth-century American writers frequently cast the Mormon as a stock villain in such fictional genres as mysteries westerns and popular romances. If today some authors like Tom Clancy use &quot;Mormon&quot; as shorthand for &quot;clean cut and patriotic&quot; earlier writers more often depicted the Mormons as a violent and perverse people--the &quot;viper on the hearth&quot;--who sought to violate the domestic sphere of the mainstream. Givens is the first to reveal how popular fiction constructed an image of the Mormon as a religious and social Other. The list of authors includes both American and English writers from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle&#39;s first Sherlock Holmes mystery to Zane Grey&#39;s <em>Riders of the Purple Sage</em> from Robert Louis Stevenson&#39;s <em>The Dynamiter</em> to Jack London&#39;s <em>Star Rover</em>.</p><p>For this edition Givens has expanded the final chapter shedding further light on the Mormon presence in contemporary American culture with insightful discussions of topics ranging from the musical <em>The Book of Mormon</em> to the political campaigns of Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman.</p>
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