Sunflower Sisters (Lilac Girls #3) by Martha Hall Kelly
Despite this book being listed as number three in the Lilac Girls series, the books do not have to be read in order and you do not need to read the other books to get the full enjoyment of each book. Sunflower Sisters takes place during the Civil War and covers the lives of the real life Woolsey women, from the viewpoint of Georgeanne Woolsey, as they try to bring relief to all who suffer, no matter their color and no matter their army affiliation. We also follow sixteen year old Jemma, who is enslaved with her family, on the Peeler Plantation in Maryland.
Anne-May is now the owner of the Peeler plantation and the slaves that live on the plantation. Anne-May is a vain, uneducated, greedy, selfish woman and her slaves suffer for all her shortcomings. Jemma has fond memories of her the former late mistress of the plantation because it was due to her former mistress that Jemma can read, write, and speak in an educated manner despite the fact that her former mistress could also be cruel. Anne-May forbids Jemma to read and write except when Anne-May wants Jemma to record Union secrets into a book that Anne-May passes on to men spying for the Confederates.
Georgeanne is determined to learn nursing and help on the battlefield and in hospitals despite the fierce opposition from doctors and male nurses who think that a woman isn't smart enough to be able to do the job of nursing. She, her sisters, and her mother work tirelessly to give their time, money, and possessions to help those in need. The author notes of the book are as interesting as the story, as the author relates all that the family continued to do after the war, to further the health, education, and lives of others.
This is a long story and it seems slow in the first half of the book as we get to know the characters and the times. Eventually Georgeanne and Jemma come together as Jemma comes to know she can trust Georgeanne and her family and the story feels like it is moving forward. Jemma, by the time she meets Georgeanna, is a runaway slave, having been conscripted by the Union army as their drummer "boy", until she is injured in battle. She is desperate to get back to the plantation to save her mother and sister but being caught is at the risk of her freedom and life.
Georgeanna, her mother, and sisters are determined to help solders on both sides of the war, despite all the blockades that are put in their way. The fragility of humans is ever present, people left to die because so many others need to be treated and medical help (thanks to the prejudice against how woman can help treat the sick), food, beds, and supplies are in short supply. It's not only the war that takes lives but disease runs rampant through the masses of people living in unsanitary conditions due to poverty and/or war.
I am very interested in the historical aspects of the book although the flood of information seemed to slow down the story at times. The story is wrenching on so many levels, the unspeakable brutality of people kept as slaves, and the horror of families, neighbors, and countrymen fighting each other to gruesome deaths. The fight of some women to change our times, so that women could be allowed to train and work as nurses, shows the many obstacles in the way of women being allowed to do more than just cook, clean, wash, birth babies, and stand by while people die.
Pub: March 30, 2021
Thank you to Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine and NetGalley for this ARC.