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The Miss Stone Affair:   America's First Modern Hostage Crisis!
 
 
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The Miss Stone Affair: America's First Modern Hostage Crisis! [Hardcover]

Teresa Carpenter (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 10, 2003

On September 3, 1901, Miss Ellen Stone, an American missionary, set out on horseback for a trek across the mountainous hinterlands of Balkan Macedonia. In a narrow gorge she was attacked by a band of masked men who carried her off the road and, more significantly, onto the path of history. Stone would become the first American captured for ransom on foreign soil.

In The Miss Stone Affair, master storyteller and Pulitzer Prize winner Teresa Carpenter re-creates the drama of this country's first modern hostage crisis -- an event that held the world's attention and dominated the headlines in American and European dailies for months. Using a wealth of contemporary correspondence and diplomatic cables, she constructs a narrative that is suspenseful, harrowing, and at times even comical.

On a journey that takes the reader from Boston's Beacon Hill to Constantinople and the bloody revolution-wracked nation-states of the Balkans, Carpenter introduces an unforgettable cast of characters: the strong-willed Miss Stone and her Bulgarian companion, Katerina Tsilka, who is brought along by the kidnappers -- in deference to Victorian convention -- as a chaperone; the terrorists who threaten to murder their hostages and yet are awed when Tsilka gives birth to a baby girl; the diplomat who sees the Stone case as a vehicle for his personal ambition; rival negotiators whom the terrorists pit one against the other; a media mogul obsessed with finding the hostages and securing their literary rights; and, of course, the new president, Theodore Roosevelt, who must decide if he should, as many of his countrymen are demanding, send warships to the Near East or if some quieter form of intervention might win the day.

Teresa Carpenter has produced a turn-of-the-century international thriller with precision, drama, and historical perspective. This is a story for our time.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Zooming in on a historical footnote, the kidnapping of an American missionary by Macedonian revolutionaries in 1901, Carpenter discovers a Byronic adventure and an early lesson in the perils of international power for the U.S. Ellen Stone was a committed evangelical missionary and an indomitable adventurer who became, says Carpenter, "a law unto herself" in the unstable and newly autonomous Bulgaria, which Carpenter describes as "a nominal Ottoman principality, an American-style democracy, and a Russian client state." In Macedonia, ethnic Bulgarians still ruled by Turks formed a guerrilla resistance, partly financed by brigandage. A rogue band of these revolutionaries seized Stone and another hostage, a local Protestant convert, who was five months pregnant. American involvement was delayed by William McKinley's assassination, just days after the abduction. But Stone's predicament naturally lent itself to sensational media coverage and soon became a cause c‚lŠbre, prompting a fund-raising drive to collect the hefty ransom demanded by her captors. With America's limited diplomatic presence in the Balkans, the tangled political agendas of the regional leaders, and the secrecy of the Macedonian guerrillas, the negotiations involved murky, back-channel dealings and hidden subtexts, which Carpenter skillfully delineates. Carpenter-a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, former senior editor of the Village Voice, and author of Mob Girl-might have deepened her exploration of the historical issues at stake: the consequences of Ottoman decline and American ascendance. She might even have indulged the melodramatic potential of the tale more. Still, it's a gripping yarn, even in her straightforward account. Photos, map.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Political journalist Carpenter addresses the timely subject of hostage crises by turning back to the affair of Ellen Stone, an American Protestant missionary kidnapped in Macedonia in 1901. With a pregnant Albanian woman, Katerina Tsilka, as chaperone, Stone was hauled up hill and down dale through Macedonia and parts of Bulgaria. Her captors were Macedonian Bulgarians, for whom her ransom would buy arms for their independence struggle with the nominal Bulgarian government in Sofia. Stone and Tsilka owed their lives to the Stockholm Syndrome--captors and captives becoming mutually sympathetic--and the local belief that it was bad luck to harm pregnant women and infants. A very modern-sounding array of quarreling diplomats, incompetent translators, authority figures ignorant of the Balkans, saber rattling, and intrusive media figures failed to help the hostages much, and still Tsilka delivered a daughter and, after their ransom, both women left Macedonia safely. Generally well done, the book suffers a bit from condescension toward the U.S. Navy and Theodore Roosevelt's ambitions for it, and from failing to track Stone after 1908. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 238 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; 1St Edition edition (June 10, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743200551
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743200554
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.7 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,542,777 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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18 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The author speaks, June 27, 2004
I am Teresa Carpenter, author of the Miss Stone Affair. I feel compelled to correct two outrageous claims made by anonymous reviewers here on Amazon concerning the identity of the kidnappers of an American missionary woman in the amazing 1901 case I chronicle. One asserts that there is "One very important error" in the book , namely that Bulgarians never lived in this part of Macedonia and that the kidnappers were not Bulgarian." The other alleges, equally absurdly, that "Bulgarians never lived on this part of the Balkan peninsula." I cannot imagine how they can write this with a straight face when Bulgarians were so clearly the dominant force in the region during the time of the Stone kidnapping in 1901. I suspect the assertions of these "reviewers" are part of a partisan attempt to rewrite history more favorably to Serbs and Greeks. The facts say otherwise, and that is probably why they do not have the courage to sign their names. Thank you for allowing me to set the record straight.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gripping True Life Adventure, December 17, 2005
By 
JAD (The Sunshine State) - See all my reviews

As a student of the life of the US Minister to Turkey at the time of this kidnapping, I was thrilled when Ms Carpenter's book appeared. She has fleshed out some of the stories that I had read, in such a way that the entire event comes alive, vividly.

She must have had a good time researching this book, because it is filled with the kind of people you expect to find in a good historical novel--from the fearless spinster missionary to the motley cast of her would be rescuers. We end up feeling that all of them had more than one motive for their involvement, but Miss Stone makes it back home again, and so we feel, at the end, as happy as if we had read a good who-done-it.

Ms Carpenter is to be commended--it is an incident from history that can shed light on our own time, in which those who are keen on spreading terror and anarchy are not all that different from what happened a century ago....

Some day, I hope Ms Carpenter will tackle a full length book about John G A Leishman, the US Minister and his extended family. It extends from a rags-to-riches childhood in Pittsburgh, through the saving of H C Frick's life, to the presidency of Carnegie Steel, to seeing his daughters make marital matches in the European nobility, and having sons-in-law and grandsons who served on both sides of World Wars I and II.

Another good yarn that needs to be told! And Ms Carpenter is has the gift of story telling to do it well.


See my other reviews on related subjects: "After the Ball," "Meet You in Hell". "The Johnstown Flood", Martha Sanger's book about her ancestor H C Frick, "Mellon" (Canadine) and "Carnegie".
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating tale, beautifully told, July 19, 2008
By 
K. Hafner (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

I have long admired Teresa Carpenter's writing -- mainly her ability to train her lens on a relatively narrow topic and, in the process, keep us riveted as she recreates entire worlds.

In "The Miss Stone Affair," a New York Times Notable Book, Carpenter's main subject is Ellen Stone, a Protestant missionary who in 1901 was kidnapped by a band of revolutionaries seeking to overthrow Turkish rule. Miss Stone was seized along with a pregnant Albanian woman named Katerina Tsilka.

What I love most about Carpenter's writing is how straightforward, even understated her prose is, as she expertly spins an engrossing tale. She did this with the trio of articles for the Village Voice that won her the Pulitzer Prize; she did it with her book "Missing Beauty," about the murder of a Tufts University professor; and she has done it here with the story of MIss Stone, whose unlikely adventure Carpenter tells with her inimitable grace.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
princely government
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Miss Stone, State Department, American Board, Katerina Tsilka, Ibrahim Pasha, Grigor Tsilka, Charles Dickinson, United States, The Revolutionists, Spencer Eddy, Miss Ellen Stone, Minister Leishman, The Chase, Persona Non Grata, Bible Women, New York, The Commission, Henry House, Boris Sarafov, John Hay, Supreme Committee, Madame Usheva, Sir Alfred Biliotti, Theodore Roosevelt, Bad Man
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