Undiscovered Country
A Novel Inspired by the Lives of Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena Hickok
New York : Pegasus Books, 2018.
Format: Book
Edition: First Pegasus Books hardcover edition.
Description: 284 pages ; 24 cm
An extraordinary novel portraying one of the greatest untold love stories in American politics.
In October 1932, at the end of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first presidential campaign, Eleanor Roosevelt took an overnight train from Potsdam to Albany with Lorena "Hick" Hickok, one of the top Associated Press reporters in the country. That train ride marked the beginning of an extraordinary relationship that would last the rest of Hick and Eleanor's lives.
In Undiscovered Country , Kelly O'Connor McNees adroitly mixes fact and fiction to present an intimate portrait of the love that bloomed between these two women, hidden in plain sight. Using historical records (including the more than three thousand letters the pair exchanged over a span of thirty years), McNees portrays their relationship from their introduction as reporter and subject through their intense first meetings, their burgeoning affair, and the conflicts that arose as journalist Hick's ethics were hopelessly compromised by her affection for the woman she was supposed to be covering.
A remarkable portrait of Depression-era America (including Hick and Eleanor's work on the founding of Arthurdale, the federal housing project in West Virginia for homeless ex-miners), Undiscovered Country is an extraordinary portrayal of one of the greatest unknown love stories in American politics.
In October 1932, at the end of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first presidential campaign, Eleanor Roosevelt took an overnight train from Potsdam to Albany with Lorena "Hick" Hickok, one of the top Associated Press reporters in the country. That train ride marked the beginning of an extraordinary relationship that would last the rest of Hick and Eleanor's lives.
In Undiscovered Country , Kelly O'Connor McNees adroitly mixes fact and fiction to present an intimate portrait of the love that bloomed between these two women, hidden in plain sight. Using historical records (including the more than three thousand letters the pair exchanged over a span of thirty years), McNees portrays their relationship from their introduction as reporter and subject through their intense first meetings, their burgeoning affair, and the conflicts that arose as journalist Hick's ethics were hopelessly compromised by her affection for the woman she was supposed to be covering.
A remarkable portrait of Depression-era America (including Hick and Eleanor's work on the founding of Arthurdale, the federal housing project in West Virginia for homeless ex-miners), Undiscovered Country is an extraordinary portrayal of one of the greatest unknown love stories in American politics.
Subjects:
Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962 -- Fiction.
Hickok, Lorena A. -- Fiction.
Presidents' spouses -- United States -- Fiction.
Women journalists -- Fiction.
New Deal, 1933-1939 -- Fiction.
Depressions -- 1929 -- United States -- Fiction.
Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962 -- Fiction.
Hickok, Lorena A. -- Fiction.
Presidents' spouses -- United States -- Fiction.
Women journalists -- Fiction.
New Deal, 1933-1939 -- Fiction.
Depressions -- 1929 -- United States -- Fiction.
ISBN:
9781681776798
Availability | |||
---|---|---|---|
Call Number | Location | Shelf Location | Status |
F McNees | Ballentine Indoors | Fiction | In |