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THE WIDOW’S WAR by Sally Gunning

THE WIDOW’S WAR

by Sally Gunning

Pub Date: Feb. 7th, 2006
ISBN: 0-06-079157-8
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Gunning’s quietly compelling historical novel places the limited rights of 18th-century New England married women, particularly widows, within the context of a pre-Revolutionary America in which rebellious attitudes toward English rule foment new ideas about freedom and individual rights.

When her husband dies in a whaling accident, 39-year-old Cape Codder Lyddie Berry is entitled only to a widow’s third of her husband’s estate. She is expected to move in with her daughter Mehitable and avaricious son-in-law Nathan Clarke, who, as Lyddie’s closest male relative, now controls her life. Her only ally is her husband’s lawyer, widower Eben Freeman. While Nathan is a stingy, narrow-minded Puritan, Eben, whose friend James Otis’s suit against Britain’s Writs of Assistance is a precursor to the Revolution, is more open-minded. Unable to live with Clarke, Lyddie defies social norms and moves back into her home—or one-third of it. Clarke’s plan to sell the cottage is thwarted because Lyddie’s neighbor Sam Cowett, a local Indian semi-accepted by the townspeople, refuses to relinquish his timber rights to the Berry property. When Sam’s wife Rebecca comes down with brain fever, a financially desperate Lyddie works as her paid nurse. Despite malicious gossip concerning her relationship with recently widowed Sam, Eben proposes marriage. A happy outcome seems possible until Lyddie finds herself unwilling to put herself at a man’s mercy, even reasonable Eben’s.

Gunning (Dirty Water, 2004, etc.) paints the ethical, emotional and financial dilemmas of her refreshingly adult characters in surprisingly lively shades of gray.