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OverviewExplore Historic Homes of Famous Women Add to your travel bucket list with A Room of Their Own, the history guide to famous ladies and their estates. Experience the impact of these international residents on history through the artifacts that they left behind. Experience the daily lives of feminist icons. Ever wonder what the most famous women in history did in their spare time? From bestselling author Marlene Wagman-Geller comes a women history book and travel memoir about the home museums of women who helped shape history. From female authors, artists, and public figures, A Room of Their Own has something for everyone wanting to know more about who these legendary ladies were. Connect with relics of the past. Full of historical facts and stories from 37 different locations around the world, this travel memoir also shares something that can only be found in these historic homes: the preservation of their personal legacy. Each chapter visualizes the emotional journey these residents lived through the personal items left behind. Featuring unknown stories about Frida Kahlo; Lizzie Borden; Diana, Princess of Wales; and more, history lovers will reconnect with these famous women in history as real people with everyday lives. Explore these home museums of famous women in history. The Betsy Ross Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Jane Austen's House, Chawton, The United Kingdom; Museo Frida Kahlo, Mexico City, Mexico; Anne Frank House, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Anne of Green Gables House, Prince Edward Island, Canada; Carry A. Nation, Medicine Lodge, Kansas; and more. Inside, you'll also find: How these home museums came to be Unique furniture, photographs, letters, and other artifacts History trivia about the daily lives of these famous women If you liked books such as All the Beauty in the World, Women in White Coats, or Unabashed Women, you'll love A Room of Their Own. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Marlene Wagman-Geller , Joyce MaynardPublisher: Mango Media Imprint: Mango Media ISBN: 9781684815227ISBN 10: 1684815223 Pages: 260 Publication Date: 30 August 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsContents Introduction Chapter 1: Anne Hathaway’s Cottage (opened 1892) Chapter 2: The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum (opened 1903) Chapter 3: Orchard House (opened 1912) Chapter 4: Lyme Regis (opened 1921) Chapter 5: Winchester Mystery House (opened 1922) Chapter 6: Brontë Parsonage Museum (opened 1928) Chapter 7: The Betsy Ross House (opened 1937) Chapter 8: Marbacka (opened 1940) Chapter 9: The Susan B. Anthony Museum & House (opened 1945) Chapter 10: Hill Top (opened 1946) Chapter 11: Jane Austen’s House Museum (opened 1947) Chapter 12: The Peggy Guggenheim Collection (opened 1951) Chapter 13: Ivy Green (opened 1954) Chapter 14: Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace (opened 1956) Chapter 15: Museo Frida Kahlo Museum (opened 1958) Chapter 16: The Anne Frank House (opened 1960) Chapter 17: Carry Nation House (opened 1961) Chapter 18: Maria Sklodowska Curie Museum (opened 1967) Chapter 19: The Musée Édith Piaf Museum (opened 1967) Chapter 20: Hillwood House (opened 1977) Chapter 21: May McLeod Bethune Council House (opened 1979) Chapter 22: Monk’s House (opened 1980) Chapter 23: Johanna Spyri Museum (opened 1981) Chapter 24: The Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum (opened 1984) Chapter 25: Alice Austen Museum (opened 1985) Chapter 26: Farley Farm (opened 1987) Chapter 27: The Golda Meir House Museum (opened 1995) Chapter 28: The Mabel Dodge Luhan House (opened 1996) Chapter 29: The Lizzie Borden House (opened 1996) Chapter 30: The Margaret Mitchell House (opened 1997) Chapter 31: The Princess Dianna Museum (opened 1998) Chapter 32: The Emily Dickinson Museum (opened 2003) Chapter 33: Greenway House (opened 2003) Chapter 34: The Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts (opened 2005) Chapter 35: Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation (opened 2010) Chapter 36: The Marian Anderson Historical Residence Museum (opened 2011) Chapter 37: The Belmont-Paul; Women’s Equality National Monument (opened 2016) Acknowledgments About the AuthorReviews“The book you hold in your hands is about the places where women of accomplishment (mostly renown and in one or two instances, infamy) have not only lived but worked. This has to do not only with their desks and writing spaces of course (if they were writers; some whose spaces are explored here were not) but with the whole environment of the houses in which they carried on their lives.” —Joyce Maynard, author of Count the Ways Author InformationMarlene Wagman-Geller is a bestselling author known for her work in writing about phenomenal women and their impact on civilization. Since publishing her debut book in 2008, she has gone on to write popular feminist books such as Still I Rise, Women of Means, and Women Who Launch, which were reviewed by The New York Times and The Huffington Post. Wagman-Geller currently lives in sunny San Diego with her husband and Persian cat, and teaches English when not writing her next book about famous women in history. A native of New Hampshire, Joyce Maynard began publishing her stories in magazines when she was thirteen years old. She first came to national attention with the publication of her New York Times cover story, “An Eighteen Year Old Looks Back on Life,” in 1972, when she was a freshman at Yale. Since then, she has been a reporter and columnist for The New York Times, a syndicated newspaper columnist whose “Domestic Affairs” column appeared in over fifty papers nationwide, a regular contributor to NPR and national magazines including Vogue, The New York Times Magazine, and many more, and a longtime performer with The Moth. Maynard is the author of seventeen books, including the novel To Die For and the bestselling memoir, At Home in the World—translated into sixteen languages. Her novel, To Die For was adapted for the screen by Buck Henry for a film directed by Gus Van Sant, in which Joyce can be seen in the role of Nicole Kidman’s lawyer. Her novel Labor Day was adapted and directed by Jason Reitman for a film starring Kate Winslet and Josh Brolin, to whom Joyce offered instruction for making the pie that appeared in a crucial scene in the film. The mother of three grown children, Maynard runs workshops in memoir at her home in Lafayette, California. In 2002 she founded The Lake Atitlan Writing Workshop in San Marcos La Laguna, Guatemala, where she hosts a weeklong workshop in personal storytelling every winter. She is a fellow of The MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |