"Provides an excellent model for future studies of ‘forgotten feminism’ and their contributions to the history of women’s rights in the United States."—Journal of American History
"Meticulously researched, well written, and grounded in the social, political, and cultural mores of the era, Blackwell and Oertel have brought back into historical discourse an important figure of the early women’s rights movement."—Western Historical Quarterly
"A valuable addition to nineteenth-century U.S. women’s history, the history of the West, the history of reform, and political history."—Great Plains Quarterly
"A solid contribution to the growing body of scholarship on feminism, suffragae, and nineteenth-century activism."—Vermont History
"The authors have carefully and ably crafted the life of an early women’s-rights advocate who is now overshadowed by the likes of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Lucretia Mott."—Northwest Ohio History
"Linking all phases of [Clarina Howard Nichols] life to show the impact that the westward movement of people and ideas had on national and state politics, this book is a comprehensive portrait of an overlooked nineteenth-century feminist. Based upon sound and vigorous scholarship, it is engagingly and accessibly written, and will be enjoyed by general readers as well as by academics."—Kansas History
"[This] carefully crafted and well-researched biography offers numerous insights into the politics of women’s rights activism in the nation’s heartland and into the complex factors shaping and circumscribing the strategies nineteenth-centurry female reformers employed."—Annals of Iowa
"A compelling portrait of a complicated and fascinating woman. . . . This scholarly but accessible political biography offers compelling material for readers interested in women’s, political, and western history. Moreover, it will intrigue readers not only for its analysis of women’s political past but also for its connections to our political present and future."—Montana The Magazine of Western History
"Nichols’s biographers have a wealth of published materials to draw on and have made good use of them to show the extent of and contradictions inherent in 19th-century reform movements."—Choice
“A beautifully written and captivating account of a nineteenth-century woman whose life intersected and influenced some of the most important moments in American history. The authors not only make an important contribution to the history of women’s rights, westward expansion, and violent conflict over slavery, but they also tell a great story about an interesting and complicated woman, her desire to shape the nation, and the costs of such a career in the nineteenth century. An outstanding biography of interest to general readers as well as scholars.”—Carol Faulkner, author of Women’s Radical Reconstruction: The Freedmen’s Aid Movement