This is a wonderful portrayal of the women closest to our first four presidents: how they met, how they dealt with their men's rise to power in the fledgling United States, and how they dealt with the power struggles of the new country up to the War of 1812. Hambly has a genius for showing the telling details of everyday life that create pictures of worlds, societies, and the complex ties of emotion, politics, and obligation that build cities, families, and nations.
She also very vividly shows how women who historians tend to regard as addenda--Martha Custis Washington, Abigail Adams, and Dolley Madison--were important assets to the men whose politics they supported, that their maneuvering in the social settings those men did not care for eased political and diplomatic debates, and that without their ceaseless care for the farms at home, their men would have had no financial base to work with. She does her best with Sally Hemings, that controversial figure in Jefferson's life, someone who walked the tightrobe between freedom and a man she must have loved, given her chances to escape, showing us, through Sally, how a man like Jefferson could have been two people at once, slave owner and crusader for freedom.
Hambly also shows us that ours are not the first generations of women to have to decide between careers--political secretary in support of powerful leaders--and home and children. All four of these women traveled extensively with their men, leaving their children behind to the care of others, and all came to wonder if they had done the right thing; if they should have remained behind.
The plot is a little unclear and tangled. Abigail Adams doesn't get as much time as I'd like, and Hemings vanishes. But I still love this book. I recommend it to any historical fiction fan, any fan of Hambly's, and anyone who loves to read about intelligent women of the past!