
Advance praise for "The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb"
"Benjamin handles the era of mid-nineteenth-century America like a native, telling a walloping good story about a tiny person with the soul of a giant. The lovely Lavinia Bump once again comes alive, and we're all the richer because of it."--Ellen Bryson, author of "The Transformation of Bartholomew Fortuno"
"Vinnie Bump is one of the most engaging characters to come along in a while. Nineteenth-century women had few options; Vinnie had fewer yet. Melanie Benjamin renders her deeply human in a no-nonsense Olive Kitteridge sort of way. Readers will not soon forget her. I know I won't."--Johanna Moran, author of "The Wives of Henry Oades"
"Lavinia Warren was only thirty-two inches tall, but in Melanie Benjamin's "The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb" she soars above the tumult of Gilded Age America. Benjamin makes her a woman of courage and refinement with an itch for adventure and ambitions that far outst