Susan Higginbotham John Brown’s Women: A Novel Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour #HistoricalFiction #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub @S_Higginbotham @maryanneyarde

FEATURED AUTHOR: SUSAN HIGGINBOTHAM

Welcome the featured author, Susan Higginbotham, as part of The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour being held between January 5th  – March 9th, 2022. Susan Higginbotham is the author of the Historical Fiction, John Brown’s Women: A Novel, which was released by Onslow Press on 7th December 2021 (402 pages).

Below are highlights of John Brown’s Women: A Novel,  Susan Higginbotham’s biography, and an excerpt from her book.

To follow the blog tour, CLICK Tour Schedule Page


HIGHLIGHTS: John Brown’s Women: A Novel

 

John Brown’s Women: A Novel

By Susan Higginbotham

As the United States wrestles with its besetting sin—slavery—abolitionist John Brown is growing tired of talk. He takes actions that will propel the nation toward civil war and thrust three courageous women into history.

Wealthy Brown, married to John Brown’s oldest son, eagerly falls in with her husband’s plan to settle in Kansas. Amid clashes between pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers, Wealthy’s adventure turns into madness, mayhem, and murder.

Fifteen-year-old Annie Brown is thrilled when her father summons her to the farm he has rented in preparation for his raid. There, she guards her father’s secrets while risking her heart.

Mary Brown never expected to be the wife of John Brown, much less the wife of a martyr. When her husband’s daring plan fails, Mary must travel into hostile territory, where she finds the eyes of the nation riveted upon John—and upon her.

Spanning three decades, John Brown’s Women is a tale of love and sacrifice, and of the ongoing struggle for America to achieve its promise of liberty and justice for all.

Trigger Warnings:

Deaths of young children through illness or accidents (not graphically described); implied heavy petting involving a willing minor.

Buy Links:

Amazon US    Amazon UK   Amazon CA    Amazon AU    Barnes & Noble    Kobo

AUTHOR BIO: SUSAN HIGGINBOTHAM

 

Susan Higginbotham is the author of a number of historical novels set in medieval and Tudor England and, more recently, nineteenth-century America, including The Traitor’s Wife, The Stolen Crown, Hanging Mary, and The First Lady and the Rebel. She and her family, human and four-footed, live in Maryland, just a short drive from where John Brown made his last stand. When not writing or procrastinating, Susan enjoys traveling and collecting old photographs.

Social Media Links:

Website    Twitter    Facebook Profile    Facebook Page   Instagram  ♠  Amazon Author Page   Goodreads

EXCERPT: JOHN BROWN’S WOMEN: A NOVEL 


Betsy had told Mary that Mr. Brown had taken his wife’s death hard, even though gossip had it that Dianthe had not always been in her right mind. One time the Browns had attended church with the Delamaters, whom Mary had happened to be visiting, and there she had seen Dianthe, a small, plain woman. Mary couldn’t say that she was cracked, but there had been something about her. She had a lovely singing voice, but she had sang with a fervor that was somehow disturbing. Afterward, she had come out, wearing a pretty woolen cloak that she must have made herself and taken pains over. It had fallen off her shoulders, and Mr. Brown had tenderly settled it back upon her. She had thanked him, and then, not five minutes later, it had fallen again. Mary was sure that she’d swept it off herself. She had walked placidly on, while little Ruth cradled the cloak in her arms.

After Dianthe died, taken by the childbed fever, Mr. Brown had taken his motherless children and gone to stay with one of his tannery employees. But the employee was a newlywed, and Mr. Brown hadn’t wanted to overstay his welcome. So he had brought the children back home and, through the Delamaters, had found Betsy to care for them and the house—a rehearsal, one could say, for their marriage. So far the rehearsal appeared to be going well. The children munched their bread contentedly and kicked each other under the table cheerfully, and everything in the modest house shone with cleaning.

Except, Mary found, for the spinning wheels—a great one for wool and a smaller one for flax. Dusty and forlorn, they sat in a corner, not touched since poor Dianthe had felt the first pangs of labor.

Mary felt a little strange about taking this dead woman’s place at her wheel, so she waited until the three older boys had started off for school, then scooted the wool wheel over to another part of the room, where it at least didn’t radiate so much Dianthe. With that out of the way, she set to work. Some women found spinning tedious and tried to do it only in the company of others to better while the time away, but Mary could spin for hours in utter silence and only know that time had passed by the setting of the sun.

She was still at work, pacing back and forth alongside the great wheel, when Mr. Brown came home. “Ah, I’ve missed that music.”

“Music?”

“The music of the wheel. Hard work has its own special music, I think. And it looks like you’ve been quite productive.”

Mary nodded shyly.

“Well,” said Mr. Brown after a long pause. “Carry on, Miss Day.”

 

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10 Comments
  • Roberta Eaton Cheadle
    Posted at 22:15h, 01 March Reply

    Hi LInnea, this is an interesting sounding historical novel. I like that the story revolves around three women.

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 10:28h, 03 March Reply

      Hi Robbie–Thank you for dropping in and commenting. The novel’s focus on women associated with John Brown, who was considered a radical abolitionist at the brink of the Civil War, sounds fascinating. It is on to be read list.

  • The Coffee Pot Book Club
    Posted at 03:09h, 02 March Reply

    Thank you so much for hosting the blog tour for John Brown’s Women.

    All the best,
    Mary Anne
    The Coffee Pot Book Club

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 10:29h, 03 March Reply

      Hi Mary Anne–It was my pleasure to host Susan Higginbotham and her intriguing novel, “John Brown’s Women.”

  • Jan Sikes
    Posted at 13:16h, 02 March Reply

    This is a new author to me, Linnea, and I am happy to find out about her and her book. The story sounds intriguing! Thank you for sharing!

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 10:32h, 03 March Reply

      Thank you, Jan, for dropping in and commenting. The premise of the book sounds intriguing about the women’s perspective of John Brown. The abolitionist movement prior to the Civil War is an important part of American history. This book is on my to-be-read list.

  • Pat Garcia
    Posted at 07:41h, 03 March Reply

    Hi,
    I know some things about John Brown, but I haveN’t read a book about him. The way this excerpt is written, I think I would enjoy it very much. The title intrigues me. I have put it on my TBR list and have downloaded a free sample from Amazon.

    Thank you for introducing her, Linnea.

    Shalom aleichem

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 10:40h, 03 March Reply

      Hi Pat–Thank you for dropping in and commenting on the book about John Brown. This book is also on my TBR list because I’m intrigued by the premise of the women’s perspective of John Brown, who was considered a radical abolitionist at the brink of the Civil War. The abolitionist movement not only had a profound impact against the institution of slavery but also provided a platform for the women’s movement. Shalom aleichem

  • Luciana
    Posted at 01:17h, 07 March Reply

    I hadn’t known John Brown was integral to the civil war. Interesting to read the story from a female’s POV, which you know I am always for.
    Thank you for bringing this author to my attention, Linnea.

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 14:23h, 08 March Reply

      Hi Luciana–Thank you for visiting and commenting about John Brown. He was a leading proponent of violence in the American abolitionist movement because peaceful efforts had failed. Just before the Civil War, he was executed for a failed incitement of a slave rebellion. I agree with you, the book sounds intriguing to get the women’s perspective of him and his actions.

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