In this elegant biography, Jean Baker uses previously untapped sources to portray the troubled wife of Abraham Lincoln. Photographs.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
40 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A sensitive, serious study,
By A Customer
This review is from: Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography (Paperback)
Not your typical summer fare, this book is serious and sweeping. It's a staggering chronicle of loss, beginning with the death of Mary's mother when she was a girl, through the deaths of her sons, the murder of her husband, the loss of her place in society, and the virtual loss of her oldest son and her only grandchild. The toll these tragedies took on Mary was mighty, but understandable. And Dr. Baker makes this sad saga imminently readable. I am haunted by a statement about the young Mary -- she did the wrong things well. Her unique strengths and talents were unfashionable for the time, and this cost her dearly.
34 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fascinating account.,
By MelloCello (Upland, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography (Paperback)
While Jean H. Baker has done meticulous research and her work is liberally footnoted, reading between the lines one finds a sympathetic account of one woman by another. Mary Todd Lincoln was one of the most misunderstood and reviled women of her day, for behavior that today we might understand as acting out depression, grief, anxiety and fear. I couldn't help but also feel a connection to this woman trying to survive in a repressive, male-centered society. So much has been written that portrays her husband as a saint and her as a shrew, that it's refreshing to read a more balanced view that is probably much closer to the way it really was. Mary Todd Lincoln deserves another look, both as a brave first lady enduring unimaginable tragedy and as a woman who was perhaps better suited to a different time in history.
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mary Todd Lincoln as a real person,
By
This review is from: Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography (Paperback)
Jean Baker succeeds in presenting Mary Todd Lincoln as a troubled, but real human being, which is an accomplishment given her reputation. (I mean Mary's reputation, not Ms. Baker's ;))With the loss of her mother and the subsequent losses through out her life, Mary comes across as a person who expected and worst and whose expectations were frequently met. In another time she could have been a CEO or an attorney. It is easy to see what Lincoln was attracted to and how Mary was likely to resond to a man interested in her thoughts and political insights, not just her family background and prospects as a mother. Lincoln, at least, had a caring stepmother which is more than Mary had. She was a complex woman with many strengths and serious emotional problems.
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