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Mrs Lincoln
 
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Mrs Lincoln (Paperback)

by Janis Cooke Newman (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 640 pages
  • Publisher: Myrmidon Books Ltd (3 Mar 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1905802218
  • ISBN-13: 978-1905802210
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 13 x 4.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 21,660 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review

"...this epic drama exerts an exceptional pull... an impressive, engrossing and moving piece of historical imagining and characterisation." - Holly Kyte, The Sunday Telegraph "...a tender and thoughtful portrait of a 19th century woman severely misunderstood... Mrs Lincoln unfolds with plenty to inspire and is all the more poignant for a timely arrival." - Sarah Emily Miano, The Times "I could not put Mary down and as I read it, I wept. I cannot recommend a book more. Mary is a very powerful novel." - Pat Schroeder, President of the Association of American Publishers "Mary is one of those rare books that turns the reader into an admiring fan of both the author and her subject. You feel a compulsion to urge others to read it...Newman gives Mary a riveting voice...after reading Mary, you'll view stout little Mrs. Lincoln - and her 19th-century sisters - in a new, more respectful light." - USA Today "...a gripping tale of scandal, war, intrigue, and seances...for sheer page-turning fun, Mary is perfect." - San Francisco Magazine "...a moving story of former First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln, an intelligent and unconventional woman." - Washington Woman "An old-fashioned pleasure to read - its 700 pages fly by more easily than those in novels a third its length...[views] the sweep of an extraordinary life, one that Newman manages to enliven with a verve that might have pleased, as well as appalled, Mary herself." - Cleveland Plain Dealer "...thoughtful and thoroughly enjoyable...Mary is not only a fascinating read, but also a touching love story." - Chicago Sun-Times "Mary presents a challenge to any historical novelist. Newman makes a good choice in telling the story through Mary's eyes and drawing readers into her perspective...readers looking for a vivid, mostly flattering account of [Lincoln's] once-notorious spouse, whose letters are becoming more read, will not be disappointed - and those who simply come upon it will be happily surprised." - Publishers Weekly "...mesmerizing...a gripping read that vividly portrays history in a way we all wish our high school history teachers had. Grade: A." - Rocky Mountain News "[An] inventive novel...A gripping blend of fact and fiction, Mary's dramatic life story, the tragic tale of the woman behind one of the most popular American presidents, appeals to history buffs and casual readers alike." - Pages Magazine "Janis Cooke Newman's Mary is the immensely readable, close-to-life story of America's best known and most controversial First Lady. Sensitive to the facts as well as graced by realistic dialogue and an empathetic portrayal of places and people, including Abraham Lincoln, Mary's Mary finally tells her own story. This is historical fiction at its best." - Jean H. Baker, author of Mary Lincoln: A Biography "From her words, recounting the exceptional circumstances in which [Mary Todd Lincoln] participated as a president's wife and widow, arises a poignant understanding of how she took advantage of the opportunities extended to her to fulfil her destiny." - Booklist "Moving and with an almost palpable compassion for its subject, yet clear-eyed and even humorous at times, this is a book I will be re-reading." - Historical Novels Review "Newman does an exquisite job of creating a deep sense of sympathy for [Mary Todd] Lincoln...It is all but impossible not to be moved by the repeated personal tragedies that Mary Todd Lincoln is forced to endure and by the way her individuality is constantly held against her. Newman successfully elevates her and, portraying her through a 21st- century lens, makes her an early icon for the feminist movement." - Indianapolis Star "...presents a riveting portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln...[her] hopes, dreams, feelings, and thoughts are conveyed with depth and subtlety." - Library Journal "In Mary, author Janis Cooke Newman breathes life into Mary Todd Lincoln...very affecting and memorable." - Record-Courier "...adds breadth to the biographical sketch that history has bequeathed...[Newman's] Mary Todd Lincoln was less the drama queen, wallowing in the cult of death, as many have made her out to be, and more a deeply sensitive, star-crossed woman worthy of our respect and, yes, even our understanding." - Lexington Herald-Leader "This is no run-of-the-mill historical novel. Newman has done her research, and the result is a juicy, literary read...engrossing and enjoyable." - Portland Tribune "...thoroughly engaging...it is what history doesn't tell us that makes this book sing - the inner, intimate world of a brave and fascinating woman." - Ann LaFarge, Constant Reader "...complex and compelling...the Mary who is so deftly portrayed on these pages is one who manages to survive despite the best efforts of her world to subdue her." - Nashville Scene ("Critics Pick") "Newman has no doubt done her homework...[her] writing is detailed and conversational and she has created a page-turner. The reader is left feeling like they know and understand 'one of history's most misunderstood and enigmatic women.'" - ForeWord Magazine "An invective against the crimes of psychology and the power of men over women, Mary saves Mrs. Lincoln from history and delivers her unto the feminists." - The Skinny Magazine "...a truly authentic tone and style...Mary Todd Lincoln's emotional ups and downs and enormous spending sprees are well documented, but Newman presents them in a sympathetic light, portraying Mary as a deeply passionate, intelligent woman in a time when these qualities in women were discouraged and feared." - BookPage "This is a fascinating, eloquent novel about a widely misunderstood woman...I cannot recommend Mary more highly." - Curledup.com "Throughout the novel, an underlying sensuality humanizes the prose and makes Mary seem incongruous to the formal Victorian time period in which she lived...It is a skilful characterization that makes [Mary and Abraham's] relationship together seem inevitable and unforced." - Omaha City Weekly "Remembering (as part of her 'treatment'), she takes us with her into the world that shaped her: a woman a president loved, a deeply superstitious and very politically savvy person in an age when to be either plus female was frowned on, and a character in her own right - even when no one acknowledged it except the lady herself. Take another look." - The Courier-Gazette "Janis Cooke Newman's fictional portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln - smart, funny, empathetic, and often wounded - is truly remarkable!...Newman weaves fact and creative hypothesis together brilliantly to create a tragic yet inspiring story of a rare and extraordinary first lady." - Amanda Lydon, Good Yarns Bookshop (Hastings on Hudson, NY) "Epic in scope and fully imagined, Mary is a moving portrait of a woman who has long been misunderstood. Cooke Newman creates in Mary an unforgettable account that will haunt readers long after they've closed the book. Remarkably realized, this is a devastating story of love, delusion, grief and history." - Elaine Petrocelli, Book Passage (Corte Madera, CA) "Mary is a daring novel about the inner life of Mary Todd Lincoln; an intelligent, sympathetic, well-written work of speculative fiction." - Kevin Baker, author of Paradise Alley and Strivers Row"


Product Description

May 20th. Mrs Mary Lincoln admitted today - from Chicago - Age 56 - Widow of ex-President Lincoln - declared insane by the Cook County Court May 19th - 1875. This is the Patient Progress Reports for Bellevue Place Sanatorium.Incarcerated in an insane asylum after committal proceedings instigated by her own son, Mary Lincoln resolves to tell her own story in order to preserve and to prove her own sanity. Mary Todd Lincoln the original 'First Lady' is a figure of some notoriety in the USA: British readers introduced to her for the first time will encounter a fascinating, complex and captivating heroine of history.

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Confessions of a Shopaholic, 14 May 2009
Janis Cooke Newman is a travel writer and creative writing teacher, but this is her first novel. I was really impressed and totally absorbed by it.

Through her journal, Mary Todd Lincoln takes us back to her privileged start in life, as the daughter a rich Southern (slave owning) family. She was a very headstrong child, often getting into trouble for her willful ways, and this sets the scene for the way she came to be treated by society both during and after her time as First Lady.

Mary is very ambitious, despite protesting that:
"I am not ambitious ... only suffragists and spinsters abolitionists and believers in female rights who walk the streets in Turkish pantaloons are ambitious. And they are not considered ladies."

Indeed, 'unladylike' behaviour seems to have been Mary's downfall, at least where her coniving son Robert is concerned. Her support for her husband (who she refers to throughout the book as "Mr Lincoln") is fierce and loyal. Despite his `homely' looks and lack of social graces, she comes across as being genuinely in love with him.

Mary's way of coping with Abe's low libido and the tragic death of three of her sons is to shop till she drops, and in this respect the book reads like a very modern political tale. Mary is castigated by the press for her spendthrift ways, she gets into trouble over various 'expenses' that she claims during her husband's time in office, and one of her closest confidants betrays her by writing a warts-and-all account of her friendship with America's first lady. All sound familiar?

Mary is driven mad by grief, not to mention large doses of laudanum, and she attends numerous séances in an attempt to contact her dead husband and sons. This is all grist to Robert's mill as he convinces the authorities that his mother is a danger to herself and others.

Abe Lincoln and his presidency play a relatively minor role in this book -it's Mary's story and the book is packed with fascinating facts about her life. I would particularly recommend it to anyone who enjoyed Girl in a Blue Dress by Gaynor Arnold. This time the villain isn't the husband but the cold, disapproving elder son, but the theme of a woman outliving her usefulness and being expected to conform to the way society deems she must behave is common to the two books.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Mary, Mary--, 3 Mar 2009
This review is from: Mrs Lincoln (Hardcover)
America's original 'First Lady' tells her chaotic and frequently tragic story from within the confines of Bellevue Place Sanitarium (read: insane asylum) to which she has been committed at the instigation of her only surviving son.

Mary's warm and gregarious Southern personality was at first a great asset in Abe Lincoln's rise to political power. Later, however, her character was her undoing because her behaviour, whatever its cause - sexual frustration, stress, fear, or laudanum addiction - could hardly be described as rational. Eventually her erratic actions and spendthrift lifestyle made her a high-profile embarrassment to the American Establishment as a whole and in particular to her son, Robert.

Between shopping trips that could have broken the economies of lesser nations, in Janis Cooke Newman's version Mary manages, despite the dress restrictions of the times, to engage in energetic sex sessions - not always with Abe. Don't expect sex in the oval office - it was the oval library then - but randy Mary and good old Abe were at it (allegedly) in their rooms above a queue of visitors to a presidential open house on New Year's Day 1863. Anybody who can see Abe Lincoln as a sex object must receive my vote in the imagination department; although, and maybe this is just me, that's not an image I wanted to dwell on for too long.

It could be argued that Mary's only real crime was being a loving, passionate and very sexy woman in times when the mores said such impulses should be contained, for when released they were regarded as signs of madness.

Readers should not expect to learn a lot about Abe Lincoln, the Civil War or American history in general from Mrs Lincoln, for they figure mainly as background to Mary Todd Lincoln's story; e.g., '...a speech at the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg...' covers the Gettysburg Address. Perhaps because of the period language the writing style grated in places, but that said, Janis Cooke Newman's Mrs Lincoln does depict an emotional white water ride of a life in a book that readers will discuss and possibly argue over for a long time to come. I would not wish to have missed it.


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