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While this nation has yet to elect its first woman president--and though history has downplayed her role--just over a century ago a woman became the nation's first acting president. In fact, she was born in 1872, and her name was Edith Bolling Galt Wilson. She climbed her way out of Appalachian poverty and into the highest echelons of American power and in 1919 effectively acted as the first woman president of the U.S. (before women could even vote nationwide) when her husband, Woodrow Wilson, was incapacitated. Beautiful, brilliant, charismatic, catty, and calculating, she was a complicated figure whose personal quest for influence reshaped the position of First Lady into one of political prominence forever. And still nobody truly understands who she was.
For the first time, we have a biography that takes an unflinching look at the woman whose ascent mirrors that of many powerful American women before and since, one full of the compromises and complicities women have undertaken throughout time in order to find security for themselves and make their mark on history. She was a shape-shifter who was obsessed with crafting her own reputation, at once deeply invested in exercising her own power while also opposing women's suffrage. With narrative verve and fresh eyes, Untold Power is a richly overdue examination of one of American history's most influential, complicated women as well as the surprising and often absurd realities of American politics.
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Sometimes women who make history have to pretend they didn’t make history. Untold Power: The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson - Next Big Idea Club https://t.co/7HjvtEfXq2
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Join us Monday, April 24th for a hybrid book talk in our Library and Research Center as author Rebecca Boggs Roberts discussed her book; Untold Power: The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson. Register here: https://t.co/v4SoxInrDJ https://t.co/j6t68PWoah
"[A] fast-moving, sure-footed biography..."Untold Power" is a delightful read"
--Wall Street Journal
"Untold Power is not a hagiography of Edith Wilson...[Roberts] uses Wilson's story not as an easy sell for the Women's History Month marketplace, but as a way to examine...entrenched power systems and to shade in a chapter of US history that set in motion the feminist cause"
--The Guardian
"Roberts isn't interested in venerating Wilson as a saint; nor is she looking to magnify the First Lady's flaws. Rather, she lets Edith be Edith, which is to say messy and complicated, as most humans are."
--The Washingtonian
"Historian Rebecca Boggs Roberts gives Edith her due, demonstrating that, as the first unelected woman to govern the country, Edith has no match...This well-told history, based on sources that are often at odds with Edith's own memoir, also begs the question: How could so much in the White House have gone unseen and unknown for so long? And, chillingly, could it happen again?"
--BookPage
"For the armchair historian, this richly embroidered narrative is a pleasure to read. Roberts is a fine storyteller, and she offers a compulsively readable, analytical biography of a complex woman too often depicted as a simple caricature...Roberts widens the lens traditionally focused on great white men to consider a broader set of historical actors, and to think about politics and power in a more nuanced way."
--Washington Monthly
"A solid biography of first lady Edith Bolling Galt Wilson...As Roberts succinctly puts it, Edith became 'the most powerful woman in the nation, ' while pretending to be 'nothing of the kind.' Enriched with incisive sketches of the era's political figures, including socialite Alice Roosevelt Longworth, and concise history lessons on the Treaty of Versailles, the League of Nations, and more, this is a rich portrait of a singular first lady."
--Publishers Weekly
"Americans have often preferred their First Ladies to be merely decorative, aspiring to nothing beyond the role of devoted helpmate and gracious hostess. So, in 1919, good thing few people knew that for most of a year the power behind the presidential seal was not Woodrow Wilson--who lay incapacitated by a stroke--but his second wife, Edith Bolling Galt Wilson. In Untold Power, Rebecca Boggs Roberts paints a vivid and riveting portrait of Edith, in all her prickly, contradictory splendor. Told with gusto, historical care, wry humor, and crisp insight Boggs Roberts leads us on a spirited expedition in search of Edith, who dared to become that most dangerous thing, a woman wielding power."
--Elaine Weiss, author of The Woman's Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote