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Unruly Human Hearts

A Novel

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A tale of faith, passion, idealism, and betrayal, perfect for book clubs, fans of Sue Monk Kidd's The Invention of Wings, and those fascinated by love triangles, contradictions between public images and private lives, and the limitations faced by women in the nineteenth century.
Elizabeth Tilton, a devout housewife, shares liberal ideals with her husband, Theodore Tilton, and their pastor and close friend Reverend Henry Ward Beecher, both influential reformers of the Reconstruction Era who promote suffrage for women and former slaves and advocate for the spiritual power of love rather than Calvinistic retribution.

Elizabeth is torn between admiration for her husband's stand on women's rights and resentment of his dominating ways at home. When Theodore justifies his extramarital affairs in terms of the free love doctrine that marriage should not restrict other genuine loves, she becomes closer to Henry, who admires her spiritual gifts—and eventually falls passionately in love with him.

Once passion for her pastor undermines the moral certainties of her generation, Elizabeth enters into uncharted emotional and ethical territory. Under what circumstances should she tell the truth? If she does, will she lose her children and her marriage? Will she destroy her own reputation and the career of the reverend who has done much good? Can a woman accustomed to following the leadership of men find her own path and define her own truth?
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    • Kirkus

      Southard offers a historical novel about the real-life Beecher-Tilton sex scandal, told from the perspective of the woman at its center. The novel opens with Elizabeth Tilton on her deathbed in Brooklyn, New York, in 1897, reflecting on the defining moments of her life that still haunt her. In her infirmity, she struggles to recognize some of her children; she has no friends she can count on, as the choices she has made have turned her into a social pariah. In this state, she slips between the present and memories from about 30 years earlier. At the time, her husband, Theodore, was a prominent New York newspaper publisher and journalist who championed the rights of enslaved people and women and the doctrine of "free love." Elizabeth was deeply involved in progressive reform and active in the liberal Plymouth Church, led by the renowned Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Theodore and Elizabeth's marriage was happy and collaborative; however, the death of their infant son, Paul, devastated them both. When Theodore confessed to a past affair, Elizabeth turned to Beecher for emotional comfort, which led to physical intimacy. Theodore, suspecting the liaison, began to publicly accuse Beecher of seducing his wife, throwing Elizabeth, Beecher, and himself into a scandal that stretched on for years, pushing them all to the brink of ruin. Over the course of this novel based on true events, Southard's prose is gripping ("The glass feels icy cold to my fingers. Dry leaves are still swirling in the wind. Tears run down my cheeks, leaving droplets on the windowsill"), and the story is suitably elegiac, calling to mind many touchstonehistorical romances. The characters are well-defined and memorable, and include such prominent historical figures as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Readers will find themselves engrossed in the drama while also learning about a peripheral but compelling piece of American history. A superbly written story of love, betrayal, and resistance in the face of crisis.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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