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A Brave and Lovely Woman: Mamah Borthwick and Frank Lloyd Wright Hardcover – March 14, 2023
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Little of Wright’s life and work has been left untouched by his many admirers, critics, and biographers. And yet the woman who stood at the center of his emotional life, Mamah Borthwick, has fallen into near obscurity. Mark Borthwick—a distant relative—recenters Mamah Borthwick in her own life, presenting a detailed portrait of a fascinating woman, a complicated figure who was at once a dedicated mother and a faithless spouse, a feminist and a member of a conservative sorority, a vivacious extrovert and a social pariah. Careful research and engaging prose at last give Borthwick, an obscure but crucial character in one of America’s most famous tragedies, center stage.
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of Wisconsin Press
- Publication dateMarch 14, 2023
- Dimensions6 x 1.2 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100299342905
- ISBN-13978-0299342906
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Meticulously researched and full of information drawn from newly discovered sources, this book is the first to restore Mamah Borthwick—a highly educated, vibrant, and well-connected woman—to her proper place in the life and work of Frank Lloyd Wright and in the history of twentieth-century feminism.”—Alice T. Friedman, author of Women and the Making of the Modern House
“An incredibly well-written and deeply researched portrayal of Mamah Borthwick. So much of her life has focused on her tragic ending without knowing more specifically who she was as a person: strong, intelligent, and fiercely brave. While her life indeed ended tragically early, there is no doubt that her brave and lovely spirit is still embedded in her home, Taliesin.”—Carrie Rodamaker, executive director, Taliesin Preservation
“A compelling read from first page to last.”—Midwest Book Review
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : University of Wisconsin Press; First Edition (March 14, 2023)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0299342905
- ISBN-13 : 978-0299342906
- Item Weight : 1.7 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.2 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #520,385 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #343 in Individual Architects & Firms
- #1,423 in Women in History
- #5,465 in Women's Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

After graduating from Northwestern University, Mark Borthwick served in the US Army in Vietnam. He received a PhD in anthropology from the University of Iowa followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at Duke University and a Congressional Science Fellowship from the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He served on the staff of the Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Affairs in the US House of Representatives and became the US Executive Director of the US National Committee for Pacific Economic Cooperation upon its inauguration by the President and Secretary of State in 1984. Subsequently he was the Director of the United States Asia Pacific Council in Washington, a project of the East-West Center. His book, Pacific Century, accompanied the award-winning, ten-hour PBS television documentary of that name.
A distant relative of Mamah Bouton Borthwick, he is the author of her biography, A Brave and Lovely Woman (University of Wisconsin Press, 2023).
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The questions that weren't answered—and will never be answered—are the core of my curiosity: why this highly intelligent woman made such seemingly poor choices in her personal life. This biography hasn't changed my opinion of those choices. While I certainly appreciate her meaning to—and influence on— Frank Lloyd Wright, she was no feminist hero. My sympathies lie with the family she left behind.
I did find a handful of small errors in the book. For example, a picture of the Imperial Hotel is captioned as taken in the 1930s; however, it's clear from the cars on the street that it's at least the mid-1950s, if not a bit later. Another error was the year of Edwin Cheney's death (1942, not 1947 as stated in the book).
This book has lingered with me after finishing it, which is always the sign of a meaningful read. As a Chicago-area resident, it's almost mandatory to love Frank Lloyd Wright—I've visited his home/studio, as well as several other properties—but this book has made me want head to Oak Park and finally take a walk past the Cheney House. I'd also like to head up to Taliesin to see the place that FLW and Mamah called home. Kudos to Mark Borthwick for doing such a fantastic job with a challenging subject!
A must read that gives you a true account of a real feminist during the early twentieth century.
In A Brave and Lovely Woman, author Mark Borthwick examines the life and work of Mamah Borthwick—the woman often referred to in sensational terms as Frank Lloyd Wright’s “mistress"— revealing a serious scholar of language, of feminist thought, and modern modes of living for men and women in early 20th Century America.
Mamah (using her first name to distinguish her from the author, her distant cousin) has often been treated superficially by Wright’s biographers as merely the wife of a client, whom he whisked away to Europe in an extramarital affair that brought tragedy to the two of them. But Borthwick’s deep research, which uncovers extensive material not previously published, reveals a strong-willed and well-educated woman ambivalent about her own marriage and perhaps the institution of marriage itself—long before Wright comes into her life. Her work translating early feminist Ellen Key informs both Borthwick and Wright about different ways of thinking about marriage and relations between men and women in general, and as a result provides a guiding defense for their relationship. Borthwick’s account shows that Wright was far from being the womanizer he is often-purported to be; rather, he sees Mamah as an equal and advocates for her as a professional and a scholar, with, as Borthwick notes, “a measure of respect that he did not always extend to others.”
In this chronicle of Mamah’s and Wright’s struggles against the social mores of the day, two antagonists emerge. The “yellow press” of the day felt free to invent or exaggerate the details of their relationship, in a drive to sell newspapers and without regard to the personal impact on the lives of those involved in the affair; and these spurious accounts in turn have informed writers of fiction, plays, and opera to present the matter through the lens of scandal. The other antagonist is Catherine Tobin, Wright’s wife, who refused for years to give him a divorce, who planted false information with the media, and who, it seems, manipulated her own children to embarrass Wright publicly. While sympathies may naturally extend to Catherine as a scorned spouse with young children, Borthwick makes it clear that much agony for all could have been avoided if she had given Wright the divorce he asked for, ending a marriage that was no longer working.
Borthwick also contributes new scholarship around the murder of Mamah and others at Taliesin. Where recent books have tried—and failed—to provide insight into the circumstances and motivations of the murderer, Borthwick triumphs with a fact-based narrative of the events that should definitively supplant the breathless speculation that has haunted the memory of August 1914. One hopes that this work finally deposes the fictional accounts of Mamah and Wright’s relationship with a richer, and truth-filled, story about two serious people trying to change the world around them for the better, finding support for and from each other.




