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The Queen of the Platform

A Novel of Women's Rights Activist Ernestine Rose

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Susan Higginbotham has a gift for telling the tales of strong women who stepped out from the shadows into which society's strictures would have cast them in order to make their indelible marks on history. . . . Weaving together sumptuous prose and groundbreaking research, Higginbotham delivers a read that is both empowering and important."

-Allison Pataki, New York Times bestselling author of Finding Margaret Fuller


From the award-winning author of The Stolen Crown and Hanging Mary comes a novel based on the life of the indomitable Ernestine Rose, whose fearless advocacy helped bring about the rights women enjoy today.


Question everything, Ernestine vows while growing up in a Poland ravaged by the Napoleonic wars. Accept nothing blindly.


Rejecting her rabbi father's religion and an arranged marriage, Ernestine strikes out on her own, arriving in New York in 1836. Distressed by the injustices around her, she takes to the public speaking platform, pressing for the abolition of slavery and for women's rights alongside activists like Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. But at a time when women are expected to confine themselves to the parlor and the hearth-and when an atheist is best advised to say nothing at all-is Ernestine's adopted country ready to hear her?


Following Ernestine through triumph and heartbreak and across two continents, The Queen of the Platform brings out of history's shadows a heroine who braved public scorn to fight for the values she held dear.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 4, 2024
      Higginbotham (The Traitor’s Wife) offers a stirring tale of suffragette and abolitionist Ernestine Rose (1810–1892), a contemporary of Susan B. Anthony. In 1822 Poland, Ernestine refuses the marriage arranged by her rabbi father, to take place when she’s 16, telling him, “It is unjust for women to be traded like cattle.” Pursuing her desire to travel the world, she moves to Berlin the next year to live with her sister. There, she invents and sells perfumed paper and teaches languages to support herself, and continues to speak out against societal restrictions on women. In Paris, she makes bullets for France’s Revolution of 1830, then moves to London, where she meets textile manufacturer and social reformer Robert Owen and his colleague, silversmith and fellow atheist William Rose. Ernestine gives her first public speech to condemn the Reform Act of 1832, the first British law to officially bar women from voting. After she marries William, the couple moves to New York City, where Elizabeth Cady Stanton dubs her “queen of the platform” for her fiery and witty lectures on women’s suffrage and abolition. In Higginbotham’s capable hands, Ernestine emerges as a well-rounded character and a figure worthy of more attention. It’s a satisfying portrait.

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  • English

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