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Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution
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About This Book
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Biography, PRIDE AND PLEASURE tells the story of Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler, born to wealth and privilege in New York's Hudson Valley during the latter half of the 18th century. Raised to make good marriages and supervise substantial households, they became embroiled in the turmoil of America's insurrection against Great Britain — and rebelled themselves, in ways as different as each was from the other, against the destiny mapped out for them. Glamorous Angelica, who sought fulfillment through attachments to powerful men, eloped at twenty with a war profiteer and led a luxurious life, first in Paris, then in London, charming Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and the Prince of Wales. Eliza, one year her junior, too candid for flirtation and uninterested in influence or intrigue, married a penniless illegitimate outsider, Alexander Hamilton, and devoted herself to his career. But after his appointment as America's first treasury secretary, she was challenged by the controversies in which he became involved, not the least of which was the attraction that grew between him and her adored sister. When tragedy followed, everything changed for both women: one deprived of her animating spirit, the other improbably gaining a new, self-determined life. "You would not have suffered if you had married into a family less near the sun," wrote Angelica to Eliza, "but then [you would have missed] the pride, the pleasure, the nameless satisfactions." Drawing on deep archival research, including never-published records and letters, Amanda Vaill dismantles the false binary of private experience and public events to create a history of the founding era that is also a narrative with the sweep and intimacy of a nineteenth-century novel. Full of battles and dinner parties, murky politics and transparent frocks, fierce loyalty and betrayals both public and personal, PRIDE AND PLEASURE brings to two extraordinary American heroines to life.
Reviews
"It's an elegant and entertaining account of the surprisingly modern lives of founding women."
"An experienced biographer and historian with three previous books to her credit, Vaill flags her well-informed speculations throughout Pride and Pleasure by posing them as questions."
"A detailed and fascinating story of two strong women."
"An engaging blend of perceptive biography and vivid narrative history."
"Vaill's bold choice to narrate the family's experience in the present tense, as they lived it, while rendering the broader course of human events in the simple past, keeps us close to the action."
"Gripping, if sometimes speculative ..."
"If the book lags at times, it is when describing the battles between men, on and off the field."
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