Review:
``Anderson is particularly deft in her reading of Mary's letters as literature.''--The Canadian Historical Review
``[These letters] show a forthright woman unafraid to venture her views on any subject, including the usually forbidden areas of politics and religion.''--Globe and Mail, August 14, 2004
``A fascinating primary source that reveals matters of daily life, survival, cultural mores, the impact of social stigma and much more. Extensively annotated with relevant historical notes and insights, The Life Writings of Mary Baker McQuesten is a superb, revealing, and inspiring account, not to be missed.''--Bookwatch, September 2004
``Through her expert and detailed analysis of the McQuesten letters, Mary J. Anderson lovingly places them in context -- of the family, the burgeoning city of Hamilton, the nation, and of Western society in general...The letters are riveting reading.''--Brian Henley
``Mary J. Anderson has raised the blinds on several windows at Whitehern -- Hamilton's historic residence -- revealing to the public eye the private life of a complex family. Using the letters of Mary Baker McQuesten in the Whitehern archives, Anderson has woven a narrative so skillfully that it reads like Victorian fiction.''--Rev. Dr. T. Melville Bailey
``Anderson has produced a valuable edition of Mary Baker McQuesten's letters and life writings, employing a careful selection of 150 documents to illustrate the life of this Victorian matriarch and her family, her social and religious work, and her unique perspective on the culture and society of Hamilton and Canada during the Victorian and Edwardian periods. Fully annotated, these letters and life writings are supplemented by biographical information about Mary and her family, pictures and genealogies, and a discussion of personal letters as a literary genre. This volume will be invaluable to both historians and scholars of women's studies, and would be of interest to any reader who is eager to encounter a powerful and engaging personality.''--Elisabeth Anne MacDonald-Murray "Canadian Book Review Annual, 2006 "
``Some of the characters in the McQuesten family saga come straight out of a Gothic novel: the wicked stepmother, the alcoholic wastrel, the sacrificial maiden, the suspected suicide and the formidable Presbyterian matriarch.''--Regina Haggo "The Hamilton Spectator, May 15, 2004 "
``Operating on a tier below other reformers such as suffragist Nellie McClung (a fellow critic of the Great War), parliamentarian Agnes McPhail, and WCTU leader Laetitia Youmans, Mary Baker McQuesten represents many a tireless local activist affected by maternal feminist convictions that women must clean up the mess men had made of society, for the sake of everybody's children.''--Jan Noel
``Mary J. Anderson has performed a valuable service for historians, women's studies scholars, and students of autobiography and cultural history by editing and disseminating the letters of Mary Baker McQuesten: public woman, family matriarch, social hostess, and above all, powerful personality. Mary McQuesten's letters form a fascinating archive of life in late-nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century Ontario.''--Lorraine York
Synopsis:
Personal letters tell the story of this Victorian matriarch who was left impoverished after the death of her husband to raise and educate six young children. An illuminating view of a southern Ontario family as well as social attitudes from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In her uninhibited style, in letters mostly to her children, Mary Baker McQuesten chronicles her financial struggles and her expectations. The letters reveal her forthright options on a broad range of topics: politics, literature, social science, and even local gossip. Mary Baker McQuesten was also president of the Women's Missionary Society. The appearance, manner, and eloquence of various ministers and politicians all come under her forthright scrutiny, providing lively insights into the Victorian moral and social motivations of both men and women as well as about the gender conflicts that occurred both at home and abroad.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.