| Written by Michael O'Brien - Audio book narrated by Cassandra Campbell - Unabridged Nonfiction - 10 RETAIL EDITION COMPACT DISCS - 12 hours Publisher, Tantor Audio (March 2010) NOTE: RETAIL EDITIONS are packaged in attractive, compact cardboard, jewel-case or DVD shrink-wrapped cases, with full-color art. Listen to a FREE audio clip. "[A] subtle and sinuously original book." ---Boston Globe "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." ---Library Journal Starred Review "Readers of American and European history will exult in the informative contrast of post revolutionary American values and the glittering European and Russian courts." ---Publishers Weekly "O'Brien's 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." ---Kirkus Bancroft Prize–winning historian Michael O'Brien presents the first full account of a dramatic journey by the wife of a future American president. 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, down the Baltic coast to Prussia, across the battlefields of Germany, and into a France that was then experiencing the tumultuous events of Napoleon's return from Elba. Along the way, she learned what the long years of Napoleon's wars had done to Europe, what her old friends in the royal court in Berlin had experienced during the French occupation, how it felt to have her life threatened by reckless soldiers, and how to manage fear. The journey was a metaphor for a life spent crossing borders: born in London in 1775, she had grown up partly in France, and in 1797 she had married into the most famous of American political dynasties and become the daughter-in-law of John and Abigail Adams. The prizewinning historian Michael O'Brien reconstructs for the first time Louisa Adams's 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. About the Author: Michael O'Brien is a 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. About the Narrator: Cassandra Campbell has recorded over one hundred audiobooks and directed many more. She has received ten AudioFile Earphones Awards and is an Audie Award winner and nominee. As an actress and director, she has worked off Broadway and in regional theaters across the country, as well as doing voice work on numerous commercials and films. |