![]() Since the letters quoted in this book are unedited, the narrative pace occasionally slows, but the author’s reasons become clear once she shows the result of some dastardly editing by Jared Sparks, who was famed for amassing some of the most important documents of the period relating to Franklin and George Washington. Women were taught to read but not to write, so spelling and punctuation are random. ![]() ![]() She was also very lucky in that her brother looked after her needs, eventually giving her a house of her own and providing her with books. “She became a wife, a mother, and a widow… strained to form the letters of her name.” Benjamin’s references to her missives helped Lepore gain at least a partial picture of a little-educated woman who nonetheless showed a great mind capable of deep opinions. “He became a printer, a philosopher, and a statesman,” writes the author. ![]() Of course, it helps that her letters were to her brother, one of the most significant figures of the time period. The first existing letter in her own hand was written when she was 45 years old. Jane Franklin Mecom (1712–1794) did not come into her own until she was widowed in 1765 at the time, widows possessed greater rights than married women. ![]() The Story of America, 2012) masterfully formulates the story of Benjamin Franklin’s youngest sister, who will be virtually unknown to many readers, using only a few of her letters and a small archive of births and deaths. New Yorker writer Lepore (History/Harvard Univ. ![]()
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