Hearts of Fire: Great Women of American Lore and Legend

by Kemp Battle

Hardcover, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

305.4

Collection

Publication

Harmony (1997), Edition: 1, 437 pages

Description

In Hearts of Fire, Kemp Battle celebrates a diverse and deeply satisfying array of folk heroines and other great American women - memorable midwives, teachers, medicine women, historians, mothers, spiritual healers, and suffragettes - who represent an astonishing range of experience and give new meaning to the term pioneer. Gathered from books, journals, diaries, newspapers, and letters spanning three centuries, these fascinating stories highlight the American woman's journey toward identity, independence, and self-creation. They serve to remind us, yet again, that America's faith in an individual's right to the pursuit of happiness has been tested repeatedly by our nation's women. These pages are filled with women like Fanny Fern, the first female newspaper columnist in America, whose early and eloquent review of Whitman's Leaves of Grass stands out as a vivid and prescient testimonial; Ernestine Rose, who fled from an oppressive father in Poland to become one of the first leaders of the American suffragette movement; Sojourner Truth, whose wisdom and insight into the nature of slavery humbles us still; Dorothea Moulton Balano, a seafaring woman whose infectiously exuberant diaries would inspire anyone to go to sea; Luella Day, a practicing physician, who took off for an adventure in the Yukon during the gold rush only to confront the surprising specter of poverty and suffering in the Klondike; and Lynda Van Devanter, an army nurse in Vietnam, whose memories of war offer us a glimpse into the powerful idealism and indomitable will necessary to survive the worst traumas. Whether they are of major or minor importance to the narrative of American history, the many women who come alive in these pages represent a vivid part of our national character and the path of our nation's destiny. Hearts of Fire honors these great women, whose defiance of expectations and conformity was sometimes dangerous, often arduous, and always inspiring.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member kelawrence
I loved this book - it's one of my "keepers." It's basically a grouping of short stories that run the gamut from Native American women, African American women, American women (from western settlers in covered wagons to Civil War heroines to depression-era and Rosie the Riveters, suffragists, etc.)
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stories about women you've never heard of and stories/characters that you know (Sakagawea, Harriet Tubman, etc.), but the legends bear repeating. Some are just one or two pages long - other are a chapter. Really, really interesting stuff without being boring - a lot of "forgotten" tales that are still relavant today.

I highly recommend it as a pleasure read, but may also be a great resource for someone in school who has to do a paper on an American female figure but is looking for something a little different than the "norm" (Laura Ingalls Wilder, Susan B. Anthony, Clara Barton, etc.) Lots of interesting personalities to learn about!
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

437 p.; 9.5 inches

ISBN

0517703971 / 9780517703977

Local notes

FB
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