<i>Brave Hearted</i> is not just history, it is <b>an incredibly intense page-turning experience</b>. To read what these women endured is to be transported into another universe of courage, loss, pain, and occasionally victory. This book is <b>a triumph</b>.
Amanda Foreman
A <b>vivid, fascinating</b> rag rug of cultural history that braids together stories usually kept apart . . . Gripping, eye-opening, enlightening
- Emma Donoghue,
This book delivers a blazing 360 degree view of the American story. Each page is <b>packed with gumption and grit and genius</b>.
- Bettany Hughes,
Katie Hickman has gathered a collection of <b>intriguingly vivid first-hand accounts</b> written by some of the women who ventured west. . . Hickman's <i>Brave Hearted</i> puts the rough texture of personal experience back into the big narrative of how the west was won. Along the way, she shows us what was lost.
- Lucy Lethbridge, Literary Review
<b>Beautifully written</b>, this gripping book explores the stories of the fierce women who helped shape the American West.
- Clover Stroud, Independent
In the past 50 years there has been an explosion of scholarly research that has served to dismantle those hoary old myths about the Wild West as a white male space in which women looked worried or sashayed into a saloon bar looking for trouble. In <i>Brave Hearted</i> Hickman makes deft and sensitive use of this new material. The result is <b>a glorious patchwork</b> . . . does these extraordinary women proud
- Kathryn Hughes, Sunday Times
In this <b>richly evocative</b> book, Hickman takes us to the crux of women's experiences in that fast- changing world, where opportunities for women were opening up in an often lawless atmosphere of greed, gambling, drinking and whoring. It was a rough ride, and the survivors were heroines, all of them.
Daily Mail
'Working mainly with published sources, [Hickman] has woven together an extraordinary range of women's first-person voices - we hear from more than fifty of them - into <b>a gripping narrative</b>.'
TLS
A triumphant narrative that brings many overlooked women into the spotlight.
Booklist
As easy to read as any Western with the added advantage of showing a new version of the Old West, one vital for readers to explore.
Library Journal
Full of heartrending accounts of courage and tragedy, this is<b> a vital contribution</b> to the history of America's frontier.
Publishers Weekly
An unforgettable cast of characters brings <b>an epic tale </b>to life.
BBC History Magazine
<b>Absolutely compelling</b>; telling the stories of women who for so many years have been written out of history, and making us completely rethink our image of the Wild West.
- Christina Lamb, Sunday Times
[A] wide-ranging survey of the multifaceted roles of women in the 19th-century settlement of the American West... Hickman writes sensitively... A welcome corrective to the long-skewed male-centric history of westward expansion.
Kirkus
<b>A riveting new history</b>.. <b>Hickman's writing is exquisite</b>; her background as a novelist brings these women into dramatic relief... A meticulous scholar, Hickman draws on diaries and memoirs to immerse us in these women's lives and offer important correctives... <i>Brave Hearted</i> is an alternative history of a frontier that was home for some and a fantasy for others long after the Census Bureau decided it was gone
Los Angeles Times
The extraordinary, dramatic story of the women of the American west
'Brave Hearted is not just history, it is an incredibly intense page-turning experience. To read what these women endured is to be transported into another universe of courage, loss, pain, and occasionally victory. This book is a triumph.' Amanda Foreman
'This book delivers a blazing 360 degree view of the American story. Each page is packed with gumption and grit and genius.' Bettany Hughes
'Absolutely compelling; telling the stories of women who for so many years have been written out of history' Christina Lamb, Sunday Times
Whether they were the hard-drinking hard-living poker players and prostitutes of the new boom towns, 'ordinary' wives and mothers walking two thousand miles across the prairies pulling their handcarts behind them, Chinese slave-brides working in laundries, or the Native American women displaced by the mass migration of the 'whites' to their lands, all have one trait in common: that of extreme resilience and courage in the face of the unknown.
Reading the extraordinary accounts they have left behind them, their experiences seem as strange to us today as it must have been to have lived through them, perhaps even stranger. They were put to the test, in terms of sheer survival, in ways that we can only dimly imagine.
'Myth and misunderstanding spring from the American frontier as readily as rye grass from sod, and - like the wiry grass - seem as difficult to weed out and discard,'but the true-life story of women's experiences in the 'Wild West' is more gripping, more heart-rending, and more stirring than all the movies, novels, folk-legends and ballads of popular imagination.
Hard-drinking, hard-living poker players and prostitutes of the new boom towns; wives and mothers travelling two and a half thousand miles across the prairies in covered-wagon convoys, some of them so poor they walked the entire route, pulling their possessions behind them in handcarts; African-American women in search of freedom from slavery; Chinese sex-workers sold openly on the docks of San Francisco; Native American women brutally displaced by the unstoppable tide of white settlers -- all were women forced to draw on huge reserves of resilience and courage in the face of tumultuous change.
Drawing on letters, diaries, and other extraordinary contemporary accounts, sifting through the legends and the myths, the laws and the treaties, Katie Hickman presents us with cast of unforgettable women: the Presbyterian missionary Narcissa Whitman, who in 1837 became the first white woman to make the overland journey west across the Rocky Mountains; Cockawin, a Brule Tribe elder left for dead after the Battle of the Bluewater, forced to bind up her wounds with strips of skunk skin; Biddy Mason, the Mississippi slave who fought for her freedom through the courts of California; Olive Oatman, adopted by the Mohave, famous for her facial tattoos.
Brave Hearted is an epic story about the transformation of the American west, as seen through the eyes of the women who witnessed it; a tale brought vividly to life by a brilliant social historian and a wonderful story-teller.