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Obstinate Daughters: The Rebels, Writers, and Renegade Women Who Ignited the American Revolution

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From the New York Times bestselling author of The Girls of Atomic City and The Last Castle comes a sweeping chronicle challenging the traditional mythology of the nation's beginnings and championing the unsung women behind the American Revolution.

History has always celebrated the "Founding Fathers"—the sly but victorious tactics of Washington, the daring exploits of Lafayette, the grand ideas of Jefferson. Yet we rarely hear of the women who kept the colonies running and liberty alive. Obstinate Daughters finally rewrites the story of America’s birth by revealing the courageous, resourceful women whose actions shaped a nation. From the battlefields to the printing press, from the plantations to the pulpit, these women fought, spied, published, preached, farmed, organized. From the front lines to the home front, from the colonies to the frontier, these unsung heroines turned the tide.

In Obstinate Daughters, readers will meet women who armed themselves and took matters into their own hands to defend their town. A Cherokee leader who warned patriot settlements of looming attacks, risking the lives of her own people in the process. A British spy at the center of a plot to assassinate George Washington. Enslaved women who risked their lives while fighting a parallel battle for their own freedom, embodying the very ideals the revolution claimed to uphold. The only woman to have her name on the Declaration of Independence. And many more.

As she has done so many times before, Kiernan masterfully weaves these individual stories together into a single, compelling narrative and carves a place in history for these impactful females. With journalistic rigor and narrative flair, Kiernan reminds us that the past is always open to challenge, and that every untold story can inspire a new generation.

432 pages, Hardcover

First published June 23, 2026

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About the author

Denise Kiernan

31 books531 followers
Denise Kiernan is an author, journalist, producer, and host of “CRAFT: Authors in Conversation.” Her new young reader’s book, "We Gather Together: Stories of Thanksgiving from then to now," arrived September 2023, and is a companion title to the popular adult nonfiction book, "We Gather Together," and children’s picture book, Giving Thanks. Her titles "The Last Castle" and "The Girls of Atomic City" were both instant New York Times bestsellers in both hardcover and paperback. "The Last Castle" was also a Wall Street Journal bestseller, a finalist for the 2018 Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award and a finalist for the Southern Book Prize. "The Girls of Atomic City" was also a Los Angeles Times and NPR bestseller, was named one of Amazon's “Top 100 Best Books of 2013,” and is now available in multiple languages. It was also awarded the 2014 American Political Science Association's Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for the best book published in the United States on government, politics, or international affairs.

Kiernan has also co-authored several popular history titles including "Signing Their Lives Away," "Signing Their Rights Away," and "Stuff Every American Should Know." She has been published in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Village Voice, Time, Ms. Magazine, Reader's Digest, Discover and many more publications. She has also worked in television, serving as head writer for ABC's "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" during its Emmy award-winning first season and has produced for media outlets such as ESPN and MSNBC.Throughout her career, Kiernan has been a featured guest on many radio and television shows, including NPR's "Weekend Edition," PBS NewsHour, MSNBC Morning Joe and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. She lives in North Carolina.

Find out more about Denise's projects at:
http://denisekiernan.com
http://facebook.com/DeniseKiernanAuthor
http://www.twitter.com/DeniseKiernan
https://www.instagram.com/iamdeniseki...

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Katie B.
1,837 reviews3,187 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
June 22, 2026
Thank you Dutton for sending me a free advance copy!

I’m always up for learning about women’s wartime contributions. OBSTINATE DAUGHTERS caught my eye as the focus was on the American Revolution rather than a world war. The author introduces us to sone of the women whose actions helped shape the country and also shares her travel tales to the historical sites.

It’s been decades since I’ve been in a classroom so the book also served as a refresher course on the American Revolution. Native and enslaved women were featured as well rather than focusing only on white women’s contributions. While there’s a ton of interesting info presented it was hard keeping track of everyone. Someone would be introduced and then it might be awhile before their name was brought up again.

So a bumpy reading experience but if you have a strong interest in the subject it’s still worth checking out.
Profile Image for Linda Galella.
1,135 reviews115 followers
June 30, 2026
From the earliest pages to the last, while reading OBSTINATE DAUGHTERS , by Denise Kiernan, the old adage, “Behind every great man is a greater woman.”, kept coming to mind. The women presented in this meticulously researched book come to life under the skillful prose of Kiernan. Some of the brave daughters were familiar but most were new to me. Their accomplishments were foundational in the formation of our United States of America and it’s well beyond time for them to be recognized. Two hundred fifty years was a long time to wait but they’ve finally been recognized by a talented author who gave eight years of her life to give them their due.

Author, Denise Kiernan’s, writing is exquisite. Her ability to take extensive research and deliver accessible prose, is magical. I was drawn completely into each chapter and amazed as individuals reappeared, how they interconnected and moved through Revolutionary War events.

It was extremely satisfying to find so many of these women involved in writing, bookstores, newspapers and other literary pursuits. The accounts of how an enslaved poetess moved freely to provide critical influence thru her poetry had me stunned. All of these women were courageous, sometimes acting in place of wounded or dead husbands as far as fighting on battle fields. Others took over family businesses in their absence or created businesses of their own to help in the fight for freedom. Chapters highlighting women acting as spies, dressing like men for access purposes or taking on key religious roles are thrilling. More than a few times it felt like I was reading an epic thriller. I can easily see this book becoming a series on a streaming platform.

The book begins with insights about the Indigenous tribes and their women leaders; immensely interesting and not what’s being taught in our history classes. Kiernan begins this discussion well before the 1776 signing of the Declaration of Independence. It’s an humbling part of this work. If you ever wondered about wampum, you’ll find an informative explanation in these pages.

Kiernan continues the book in rough chronological order of events. In between traditional chapters, she inserts unnumbered others that tell of her personal experiences visiting locations of particular importance to the story. Readers are clued in to present day conditions about key historical sites and unique opportunities to experience; intriguing.

The final 20% of the book is devoted to Kiernan’s notes. To quote the author, “Welcome to the notes section! You’re about to have a blast”. Part of the notes are what she calls, “Global”. These are a few pages of groupings by specific subject for easy access. Most of the notes are done exhaustively by chapter. For those who enjoy extra details, her key research info is easily visited by smart links highlighted blue. It will be easy to spend days, maybe months, following your own inquiries.

Who’s the best reader for this magnificent book? Highly recommended for readers of American History, Revolutionary War, History, Women in History, Women of the Revolutionary War or any reader of Non-Fiction, Homeschoolers. An excellent addition to Highschool Libraries, Public Libraries, Family Libraries. A must read for everyone📚

I received a copy for review purposes. All opinions are honest and mine alone.
Read and Reviewed from an e-ARC via Kindle with thanks to the publisher and author.
Profile Image for ♡ Vincent ♡.
108 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
June 11, 2026
Before I start this review - I want to clarify the reason I took a long time to read this book wasn't because it's bad but more because I had finals and other things so I couldn't read it.

But onto the review. I won it from Goodreads in March but I didn't receive it until May 31th so due to that I went straight into reading this as I wanted to see if it was worth the wait.

It was for sure.

The names of people you already knew, like the founding fathers and their wives were here but there's a whole new group of native American women whose stories were ignored until now. I loved learning about these women - as they were just as "strong as a man".

Not just them too! Enslaved women's stories were also forgotten but Kiernan brings them back to life! Like the Native women - they also had such powerful and interesting stories to tell! It will always hurt me that they are barely acknowledged in history books.

I did find some information in this book to be a bit of filler due to sources not being here and at parts, I found it to be too much to handle. Other than that, I enjoyed this book!

A must read for all readers interested in this subject!
Profile Image for Sam Sebesta.
186 reviews
July 2, 2026
This book found me about a week before the 4th of July. America 250. Red white and blue everywhere. I feel like many americans could stand to learn a thing or ten from whats tucked in these pages. This was a great dive into not only the history of the United States, but into the lives of the women who lived during those trying times. Everything they fought for and endured was equally as important as the men that are remembered more often. It details how they took the jobs no one wanted that were imperative to survival. How they sought their family tirelessly when separated and overall how they played such a crucial role in our history.
4 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
March 26, 2026
Thank you to Denise Kiernan and publisher for sending me an advanced copy. Book greatly told the story of women who ignited the American Revolution with different parts and stories. Great choice if you love history and reading nonfiction about this time period.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews