HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited…
Loading...

The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism (original 2005; edition 2006)

by Megan Marshall

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
5201246,469 (4.27)63
I can’t resist books about sisters, I've read more by and about the Mitford sisters than I’d care to admit, and this thoroughly researched book about the Peabody sisters has all the charms that the best of such books can offer--fascinating personalities, in-depth observations of their family dynamics, and an intimate window into the history of their time. It’s just as informative and moving as author Megan Marshall’s more recent book on Margaret Fuller. Those two books complement each other since they are both about women who were leading thinkers and influential players during the pre-Civil War era when American Romanticism and Transcendentalism were flowering, a time mainly dominated by men.

Money was always an issue for the Peabody family, but that seemed to push each of the sisters to excel. Elizabeth had a voracious intellect and her ideas helped inspire the likes of Emerson, Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott. She published their early works, urged them to curb their individualistic philosophies to connect more with others, and has had a lasting impact by promoting the benefits of kindergarten. Mary was a compassionate reformer who married statesman and educator Horace Mann. Sophia, though sickly, was recognized as a talented artist and she married novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne. The book’s tone is sympathetic, but honest, and the sisters come to life on the page to such an extent that it made me feel like I know them. ( )
  Jaylia3 | Jun 18, 2013 |
Showing 12 of 12
Interesting. I kept waiting for more to happen. The author was obviously very taken with these Sisters and everyone they knew. That part was impressive, but there wasn't a lot of action. ( )
  spounds | May 24, 2023 |
This book is super interesting and really inspiring. I was fascinated reading about these women who were so influential, yet I had never heard anything about them before. A really satisfying read. I feel like I should start writing people letters and keeping a journal. ( )
  Katie80 | Oct 8, 2018 |
Megan Marshall basically lived with the Peabody sisters while writing this book (as much as someone can live with a trio of sisters who've been dead for more than 100 years), and it shows in her writing. She delved into their correspondence, their personal journals, their friends' letters to other friends about the sisters, news stories, census reports. And then she took all of this and turned it into the compelling story of three sisters at the center of a huge philosophical shift that took place in New England in the first half of the nineteenth century.

What's really interesting to me was how big an influence the Peabody women had on the men whose names are usually associated with the period: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Horace Mann, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Theodore Parker, William Ellery Channing. I wasn't exactly surprised by this---I'd already read Megan Marshall's biography of Margaret Fuller---but it's still jarring to see just how easily otherwise enlightened men could brush off the accomplishments and intellectual lives of the women around them, and how readily so many women accepted their limited role in society.

I heard on the news today about some story of poor judgment (at best) on the part of a public figure in Boston, and the commentator said, "Why are we not taking to the streets about this?" I have the same feeling when I read about the Peabody sisters. Why aren't the women studying with Elizabeth Peabody and meeting in her book shop rising up and throwing off the restrictive roles their society has handed them? I can speculate about the reasons---all very good ones, too---but it still doesn't quite make sense to me how the granddaughters of those who fought to make the United States into an independent country didn't fight more dramatically on behalf of their own independence.

The other thing that I found interesting was the negative impression I was left with of Emerson, Mann, and Hawthorne. They so obviously used the intelligent women around them, toyed with their affections, pitted sister against sister, and still the sisters defended these men and fought amongst themselves (in a very genteel, epistolary, nineteenth-century way, but it was fighting nonetheless). It's just another reminder, I guess, that although men are placed on pedestals by the writers of history, they are still human beings. Once again, not surprising, just disappointing.

In addition to being an intimate story of the sisters as individuals and of their sisterhood, this is also an excellent history of the Unitarian church. I've often wondered how we got from Calvinism to Unitarian Universalism in fewer than three centuries, and this book helped me make sense of it for the first time. It also sheds light on some of the ongoing friction points within the denomination. ( )
1 vote ImperfectCJ | Jul 29, 2015 |
Megan Marshall created a page-turner about the lives of three 19th century sisters, and also filled this biography with so much fascinating information about life in the 19th century, Boston, Salem, and Concord, Emerson, Alcott, Hawthorne, Transcendentalism, and all the Unitarian ministers, especially Channing and Parker, I'd give it more than 5 stars if I could. This is the way I enjoy learning about history. Bravo--wow, and thanks to the English teacher at my high school who recommended it for our library collection. ( )
  fromthecomfychair | Nov 11, 2014 |
A somewhat complicated but revelatory story of 3 sisters whose lives spanned the 19th century, and who became associated with the new Transcendentalist movement. They were lucky in that their mother was a teacher who believed that women needed to be well educated, and so each received an unusually strong education for the time. In addition, because Elizabeth didn't marry and Mary and Sophia married later in life, they had quite a bit of time to pursue career interests in their lives. Elizabeth is a strong, likable central character, who becomes a central figure in the lives of many famous people in the Transcendentalist movement, including Channing, Emerson and Alcott. Perhaps because she is a woman, she embraces many roles: governess, teacher, publisher, bookstore owner, hostess for 'conversations', supporter of her family. It is interesting that just like Louisa May Alcott, whose father was also a founding member of the Transcendentalists, she understood that her father was not going to adequately support his family, and had to contribute earnings to keep the family afloat. I was struck by how many times each of the sisters (and their family) moved. It seems like their lives were quite transient, moving often to find opportunities for employment. It's also interesting to see a movement grow and develop, not in a straight line, but in fits and starts. These people seem like modern-day hippies, with the Fruitlands and Brook Farm communes as experimental living situations, each of which ultimately failed. The book also deals with the relatively complex relationships between the women and the men in their lives. Before mary marries Horace Mann and Sophia marries Nathaniel Hawthorne, each man has a close relationship with Elizabeth, the most dominant of the sisters. This book leaves me feeling grateful for the women who preceded me, and the work they did to make their lives meaningful.

And by the way, it's very well written. This is a very complicated story of 3 individuals and is somewhat a page-turner. I liked it very much. ( )
  peggybr | Apr 13, 2014 |
I can’t resist books about sisters, I've read more by and about the Mitford sisters than I’d care to admit, and this thoroughly researched book about the Peabody sisters has all the charms that the best of such books can offer--fascinating personalities, in-depth observations of their family dynamics, and an intimate window into the history of their time. It’s just as informative and moving as author Megan Marshall’s more recent book on Margaret Fuller. Those two books complement each other since they are both about women who were leading thinkers and influential players during the pre-Civil War era when American Romanticism and Transcendentalism were flowering, a time mainly dominated by men.

Money was always an issue for the Peabody family, but that seemed to push each of the sisters to excel. Elizabeth had a voracious intellect and her ideas helped inspire the likes of Emerson, Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott. She published their early works, urged them to curb their individualistic philosophies to connect more with others, and has had a lasting impact by promoting the benefits of kindergarten. Mary was a compassionate reformer who married statesman and educator Horace Mann. Sophia, though sickly, was recognized as a talented artist and she married novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne. The book’s tone is sympathetic, but honest, and the sisters come to life on the page to such an extent that it made me feel like I know them. ( )
  Jaylia3 | Jun 18, 2013 |
I read this for information about Sophia Peabody (Hawthorne) and found excellent information on not only the sisters but on the development of Transcendentalism in nineteenth century New England. I was particularly struck (for whatever reason) by the information on early nineteenth century medical practices (such as the use of mercury in the "treatment" of the mysterious condition we now know as infant teething). Plenty of fascinating information here. ( )
1 vote climbingtree | May 26, 2011 |
This was just awesome. The Peabody sisters were in the thick of intellectual life in New England (specifically the Boston area) in the first half of the 19th century. They knew all kinds of people who were famous or went on to be famous - one of them married Nathaniel Hawthorne and another married Horace Mann. One of them foreshadowed a lot of what Emerson made famous in his essays. And yet no one has ever heard of them.

The best parts of this book for me were about the sisters themselves and their interactions with each other. If you have siblings, you know that the connections and inner workings of that relationship are incredibly fraught and complex and difficult - sometimes all at once. This book really brought that to life for me.

Also, I felt a real kinship with these women - they were all way way ahead of their time. It's just incredible what they were able to accomplish when you consider the limitations put on women in those days.

It's a long book, but a fairly quick read anyway ( )
1 vote kirstenr | May 7, 2009 |
Heavily detailed history of the three sisters who inspired some of the great romantics - Nathaniel Hawthorne for one. ( )
  kdebros | Apr 19, 2009 |
An excellent, intelligent rendering of life in the Northeastern U.S., post-Revolutionary War/pre-Civil War. Although the book focuses on the lives of the talented Peabody Sisters (middle sister Mary was a teacher and essayist who married and influenced education innovator Horace Mann, youngest sister Sophia was an artist who married and served as muse to Nathaniel Hawthorne) it's through oldest sister Elizabeth--the glue, fulcrum and primary breadwinner of the Peabody family--that we come to understand the societal limits placed on women of that era. Elizabeth was a brilliant, disciplined thinker who taught and founded groundbreaking schools, wrote essays and books, and established and ran a Boston-based bookstore and small publishing house. Yet her primary purpose was in prodding, nurturing and supporting men who saw the world as she did: men such as Mann, Hawthorne (she was one of his earliest publishers, and found for him the infamous Customs House job, which is described in the beginning of The Scarlett Letter), Emerson, the Reverend Ellery Channing and Louisa May Alcott's father, Bronson.

I have some minor quibbles. Margaret Fuller (editor and cofounder, with Emerson, of the transcendental journal "The Dial") appears a couple of times in the book before we are told who she is and her relationship with Elizabeth Peabody is never really explored. Also, the book ends prematurely with Mary and Sophia's marriages to their more-famous husbands (Elizabeth never married), which leads me to hope that a part II is in the works. ( )
1 vote theaelizabet | Dec 28, 2008 |
A combined biography of Elizabeth, Mary and Sophia Peabody. Sophia married Nathaniel Hawthorne and Mary married Horace Mann (educator). I really enjoyed it; it had a fun combination of literary info and gossip. It was a good way to tell a biography. I even read all the notes.
I know a few things about the 19th c. and boring dead white males. It's nice to be reaffirmed in my belief that behind every one of them is a once vibrant dead white woman.
I did not know that Eliz. Peabody was such an intellectual. I find it not surprising at all to learn that R. Waldo Emerson lifted her ideas for his sermons (I never have liked him) and also William Ellery Channing. I was also not aware of her own ideas about transcendetalism and how foresighted and on the cutting edge she was.
The stuff about Hawthorne was great. I love that he romanced both Elizabeth and Sophia and could not entirely give up on E.P. because she was good for his career. Looks like she was good for the careers of lots of people. It's too bad Poe didn't set up shop in Boston or Salem; she could have found him a job or patrons as she did for Hawthorne.
Very readable. I recommend it. ( )
  susanamper | Jul 22, 2008 |
I received this as a Christmas present. I have only begun to read it, but so far I find it fascinating. ( )
  lucybrown | Dec 27, 2006 |
Showing 12 of 12

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (4.27)
0.5
1
1.5
2 1
2.5
3 7
3.5 6
4 16
4.5 7
5 25

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 203,188,987 books! | Top bar: Always visible