From Publishers Weekly
Having written about the presidential Adamses in Descent from Glory, Nagel now focuses on the women, who, although hampered by societal strictures, often equalled and sometimes surpassed (albeit less publicly) the acumen and talents of even the most illustrious Adams men. In resurrecting them, the historian pays fitting tribute to these women, immersing us in their domestic concerns and marital relationships so totally that we feel a confidant's intimacy and unabashed admiration: for first ladies Abigail, the managing matriarch, and sorely-tried Louisa, wives of John and John Quincy; Abigail's sisters Mary, community do-gooder, and parson's wife Elizabeth; Abigail's benighted daughter Nabby; and the many other fecund Adamses who produced a dynasty. The scenes shift from the family seat in Quincy, Mass., to the nation's capital and other U.S. locales, abroad to England and Russia. The lives of the Adams women, aristocrats of the spirit, were tested by priggish, boorish husbands, offspring and brothers who died of alcoholism and an era that would not acknowledge their quality. Yet first lady Louisa's motto found expression in virtually each: "Under all circumstances we must never desert ourselves." Photos not seen by PW. (September
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Nagel portrayed four generations of Adams men in Descent from Glory. Here the historian examines Adams women. At the heart of this book, in its most accomplished portions, are the chapters revealing the relationship between the three Smith sisters, Abigail, Mary, and Elizabeth. Abigail's well-known, forceful, and forward-looking opinions about women's equality shaped her sisters' lives as well as her own and were echoed in the beliefs and actions of Adams women who followed her. Nagel makes a completely new contribution with brief discussions of Abby Brown Brooks, the wife of Charles Francis Adams, and others. Collections supporting the study of the Adamses, of early American social history, and of women's studies generally will want this. Susan E. Parker, Harvard Law Sch. Lib., Cambridge, Mass.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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