The story is supposed to focus on the relationship between Mary Custis Lee, wife of Robert E. Lee and Selina Gray, slave to the Custis family. In reality, though, it felt more like a telling of the events just prior to, during and immediately after the Civil War from the separate perspective of each woman. There was no real depth to their interactions with each other, although the author hinted at it. Despite having a different idea of how the book would read before actually reading it, I liked the book a lot.
Selina Gray: Selina lived much of her life as a person who was OWNED by someone else. This defined her, set her expectations of life and made her choices for her, yet did not quell the longing to be free of human bondage. No loyalty to a family or even love for her owner's daughter would dampen that longing. You feel the reality that there can be loyalty, empathy and even a type of love between these women, but that there can be no friendship (as we think of today) between them as long as they are slave and owner. After Selina is free, social, cultural and political factors continue to come between the women and yet there is a new equality there that pushes the relationship into a more voluntary, because-you-are-special-to-me kind of existence which is nice and happy ending-ish without ignoring the enormity of what has passed between them and come between them.
Mary Custis Lee: Mary lived her life, in the typical fashion in which ante-bellum Southern ladies are portrayed. That is to say, even as an advocate for humane treatment of slaves and, indeed, a supporter of eventual emancipation, Mary lived a life of luxury and privilege, sustained by the back breaking and endless labor of an army of humans in bondage to her and her family, without fully (or even partially) realizing that her life was only made possible by forcibly (in this case, through the threat of implied violence) removing the equality, dignity, self-worth, self-sufficiency and right to life of an entire subset of humanity. I liked her character.....she seemed gentle but passionate and was a clearly loving family member, wife and mother. Yet, how much can you relate to someone who doesn't understand why her slaves, and the abolitionists, can't be reasonable and just wait patiently in line, for decades, for their turn at emancipation?
Robert E Lee: The character of General Lee, although central to Mary's happiness and the basis of so much of what she does, is not overly detailed in the novel and he appears more on the sidelines as a part in the events of Mary Custis Lee's life than in the story as a main character. He must needs place the welfare of his country over the welfare of his family and this forces them to be apart more than together and forces Mary to solve the family crises (securing food and housing, being forced out of her home, facing poverty and considerable hardship) with little or, often, no help from him. She becomes, in many ways, a single mother who finds herself in a town occupied by the enemy, who don't necessarily go away once the War is over.
All in all, a good book that I recommend to anyone interested in this time period or even just a good book about what is was to be a woman slave just prior to the Civil War and what is was like to be a woman, raised in innocence and luxury, who finds herself having to be strong and a leader in order to keep her family going.