Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Sunflower Sisters by Martha Hall Kelly

 


Sunflower Sisters by Martha Hall Kelly is the third book in her series about stories of women who lived during major American wars. These books are historical fiction inspired by real characters. The people surrounding the principal characters are a mixture of historic figures and fictional people. Sunflower Sisters has small roles for Frederick Law Olmsted and Abraham Lincoln among others.

The books do not have to be read in order. In fact, they go back in time so what happens in the preceding books actually occurs later. I've read Lilac Girls, the first in the series, but have not yet read the second, Lost Roses. Lilac Girls is set during World War Two. Lost Roses is set during World War One and Sunflower Sisters is set during the American Civil War.

Each book follows three women born into situations very different from each other. In Sunflower Sisters: Georgeanna Woolsey is an abolitionist from New York City who becomes a wartime nurse, Jemma is a slave on a tobacco plantation in Maryland and Ann-May Wilson is the woman who controls that plantation and owns Jemma. The story moves from plantations in Maryland to the luxurious buildings in New York and Washington where high society events take place and to the battlefield in Gettysburg.

The brutalities of war and of slavery are shown, but the book also focuses on women's rights. Georgeanna runs into problems as she attempts to become a nurse. Almost all of the nurses at that time were men who saw female nurses as threats to their jobs. I did not know anything about the history of female nurses in America, so this subplot was especially interesting to me. The novel also covers issues such as addiction and infidelity through the character of Ann-May.

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