Synopses & Reviews
Early in 1815, Louisa Catherine Adams and her young son left St. Petersburg in a heavy Russian carriage and set out on a difficult journey to meet her husband, John Quincy Adams, in Paris. She traveled through the snows of Eastern Europe, across the battlefields of Germany, and into a France then experiencing the tumultuous events of Napoleons return from Elba. The prize-winning historian Michael OBrien reconstructs for the first time Louisa Adamss extraordinary passage. An evocative history of the experience of travel in the days of carriages and kings, Mrs. Adams in Winter offers a moving portrait of a lady, her difficult marriage, and her conflicted sense of what it meant to be a woman caught between worlds.
Review
“Marvelous...OBrien demonstrates an enviable mastery of the historians craft.” —The Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Into this chronological narrative of life on the road, OBrien skillfully weaves a series of telling anecdotes from Louisa Catherine Adamss experience as a wife, mother, and American expatriate in Europe . . . In Mrs. Adams in Winter, Michael OBrien takes up her challenge, and succeeds commendably in bringing to light her story—a story that might otherwise have remained in the shadow of the family into which she never truly fit.” —Grace E. Jackson, The Harvard Crimson
“This enthralling, vividly written book tells the story of an amazing journey in extraordinary times undertaken by a most uncommon woman . . . [OBrien] displays admirable psychological insight into Mrs. Adams usually complex personality and general gestalt . . . Mr. OBrien has done a superb job of really understanding one of our lesser known first ladies.” —Martin Rubin, The Washington Times
“A splendid success . . . In addition to his vivid portrait of the European countryside, its history, and its notable personalities, OBrien includes well-placed and often lengthy digressions that combine to form a sort of biography of Mrs. Adams . . . Mrs. Adams in Winter contains the best biography yet published of Louisa Adams . . . OBriens elaborate description of Europes post-road system as it existed 200 years ago helps make his book such a pleasure to read.” —Paul C. Nagel, The American Scholar
“OBriens subtle and sinuously original book provides a detailed reconstruction of the journey and what it meant to make it . . . It was daring of OBrien to find the core of Louisas journey in the notion of a woman raising her head in a society that had no place for the elevation. Daring, but his brilliantly argued portraits of Adams versus Adams make it convincing.” —Richard Eder, The Boston Globe
“OBriens narrative is richly contextual, encompassing not only the great personalities of the age, whom Mrs. Adams met, but penetrating the secrets of a complicated marriage . . . A wide-sweeping historical survey and original intellectual journey.” —Kirkus Reviews
“This innovative and creatively told personal history of a forgotten figure bound by marriage to an ambitious American statesman bristles with insight into the era. Witty, informed, sophisticated, and moving; essential reading.” —Stewart Desmond, Library Journal
“Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams, a woman who spent her life in voyages both literal and metaphorical, above all longed to leave her mark on the landscape of the life she passed through. The noted historian Michael OBrien gives Louisa her voice, assuring her place in history as a woman ‘who was, as she put it. Take these twin journeys, rendered with precision and grace by a master—across the dramatic frozen landscape of Napoleons Europe, and deep within the mind and heart of one of the most compelling characters in American history.” —Catherine Allgor, Presidential Chair and Professor of History, University of California at Riverside
“Louisa Catherine Adams is an unjustly forgotten figure in American history, a formidable woman with a keen eye for the smallest details of political life. Now comes Michael OBrien with a fresh, engaging account of Mrs. Adamss 1815 journey from St. Petersburg to Paris. It is a brilliant conceit, beautifully executed, and OBrien succeeds admirably in capturing the complexities of the woman and her times.” —Jon Meacham, author of American Lion
“When we find a book like Mrs. Adams in Winter, we cant sing enough praises . . . The book is written in a wonderful style . . . This unique book is home run.” —Booklegion.com
“Marvelous . . . OBrien . . . demonstrates an enviable mastery of the historians craft.” —Alan Cate, Cleveland.com
“OBriens compelling [and] . . . splendidly researched work . . . makes for the best of reading.” —Phyllis Meras, The Providence Journal
“OBrien creates a brilliant portrait of a complex woman.” —The Week
About the Author
Michael OBrien is Professor of American Intellectual History at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Conjectures of Order: Intellectual Life and the American South, 1810-1860, which won the Bancroft Prize and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in History.