
Several years later she was basically abandoned by her husband. Though she was called wife number nineteen, in reality Brigham Young likely had fifty or more wives. Of course, his time was finite and he was a busy man. He was unable (and unwilling) to spend time with all of them. So Ann Eliza famously broke with the church, left Brigham, Utah and her family. She wrote a well known book in 1874 in which she told her story and described to the world the problems that plural marriages causes. She took her story to Washington and convinced President Grant to pass laws that put pressure on the Morman church to end the practice of polygamy.
Woven in between Ann Eliza's story is the narrative of twenty year old Jordan Scott. Jordan's story highlights how the children of some of today's splinter polygamists, known as the Firsts, continue to suffer. There are cases of young men in their early teens ejected from the group, dumped on the highway in the middle of the night with no money or possessions. The reduction of the young men leaves the young women for the older men in the group to take as an additional wife. Through Jordan's eyes we see the intolerance, isolation and loneliness of some of the women and children involved.
This was an absorbing, fascinating book. I loved the historical sections and the fact that it was based on a true story. The author did a wonderful job of showing the formation of the religion from the beginning, using the characters to give the reader an inside look.
The 19th Wife is published by Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6397-0
Thank you to TLC Book Tours for allowing me to participate in this tour! Upcoming stops are:
Friday, Nov. 7th: Educating Petunia
Monday, Nov. 10th: The Literate Housewife
Wednesday, Nov. 12th: Diary of an Eccentric
Friday, Nov. 14th: Book Chase
Order The 19th Wife from Amazon
7 comments:
I really enjoyed this book, too, but I had to keep reminding myself that it was a work of fiction. To me, that is a testament to how well written it is.
Great review! I'm reading it right now and loving it. Ebershoff is an amazing storyteller. Thanks for the link!
--Anna
Diary of an Eccentric
Wonderful review! I so want to read this book!
I have been wanting to read this book...looks like I'm going to have to get cracking on that. Nice review!
I'm with bermudaonion - this is a great work of fiction, written so well that it could be taken for a true history.
David Ebershoff will be back on my blog to answer questions about *The 19th Wife*.
Great review! I enjoyed this one quite a bit as well.
i gotta say this looks pretty delicious- a glimpse into the mormon world
i never knew that young men could be abandoned so older ones could have their choice of girls ---creepy
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