Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"This collection is perfect, offering the best of Willard without overwhelming the reader. The documents chosen illustrate Willard's uncanny political sense and ability to turn a phrase, as well as her personal trajectory through the halls of temperance, into the wide arena of national and international reforms."--Mari Jo Buhle, William R. Kenan, Jr. University Professor of American civilization and history, Brown University
"Gifford and Slagell have done an admirable job of choosing works that reflect the evolution and tenor of Willard's thought. . . . Those readers interested in a fine sampling of this important woman's discourse, a sample that illustrates the breadth and depth of her work, could do no better than Gifford and Slagell's anthology of Frances E. Willard's speeches and writings."--Journal of Illinois History
"Gifford and Slagell apply their combined expertise in history, gender studies, and rhetoric to select, edit, annotate, and contextualize 22 excerpts from Frances Willard's speeches and publication, 1874-97. . . . Highly recommended."--Choice
"
Let Something Good Be Said is the definitive collection of speeches and writings of Frances Willard, one of the most prominent American reformers and political activists and one of the most prolific female speakers and writers of the nineteenth century. As the recognized experts on Willard in the fields of history and rhetorical studies, DeSwarte Gifford and Slagell have expertly selected and annotated the first primary-text collection of her speeches and writings, providing an invaluable resource for scholars and students from a wide array of disciplines, including those interested in temperance, Gilded/Populist era social reform, and Willard herself."--Susan Zaeske, author of
Signatures of Citizenship: Petitioning, Antislavery, and Women's Political Identity