Mrs. Grant and Madame Jule A novel

Jennifer Chiaverini

Large print - 2015

"The New York Times bestselling author of Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker and Mrs. Lincoln's Rival imagines the inner life of Julia Grant, beloved as a Civil War general's wife and the First Lady, yet who grappled with a profound and complex relationship with the slave who was her namesake-until she forged a proud identity of her own. In 1844, Missouri belle Julia Dent met dazzling horseman Lieutenant Ulysses S Grant. Four years passed before their parents permitted them to wed, and the groom's abolitionist family refused to attend the ceremony. Since childhood, Julia owned as a slave another Julia, known as Jule. Jule guarded her mistress's closely held twin secrets: She had perilously poor vision but was gifted wit...h prophetic sight. So it was that Jule became Julia's eyes to the world. And what a world it was, marked by gathering clouds of war. The Grants vowed never to be separated, but as Ulysses rose through the ranks-becoming general in chief of the Union Army-so did the stakes of their pact. During the war, Julia would travel, often in the company of Jule and the four Grant children, facing unreliable transportation and certain danger to be at her husband's side. Yet Julia and Jule saw two different wars. While Julia spoke out for women-Union and Confederate-she continued to hold Jule as a slave behind Union lines. Upon the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, Jule claimed her freedom and rose to prominence as a businesswoman in her own right, taking the honorary title Madame. The two women's paths continued to cross throughout the Grants' White House years in Washington, DC, and later in New York City, the site of Grant's Tomb. Mrs. Grant and Madame Jule is the first novel to chronicle this singular relationship, bound by sight and shadow"--

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Biographical fiction
Published
Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Jennifer Chiaverini (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
675 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 385-386).
ISBN
9781410475107
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Chiaverini, well known for her Elm Creek Quilts series, has found great success recently with historical novels centered on the Civil War years, beginning with Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker (2013). Here she tells the story of Julia Grant, the wife of Union general and U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant. Despite her husband's well-known stance as a staunch abolitionist, Julia came from a slaveholding family. From her youth, Julia was close to her maid Jule, and the two were often inseparable. But as Jule matured, she became increasingly resentful of her slave status, which left her afraid to marry for fear that she would be separated from her husband. Meanwhile, Julia, insecure about her appearance, must rise to the occasion as her husband becomes increasingly prominent. When Jule finally makes the decision to run away, Julia is devastated, but it takes her years to finally recognize the inhumanity of the practice. Chiaverini so closely follows Grant's victories during the Civil War that readers may feel a tad battle weary by novel's end, but her depiction of the essential decency of some of our nation's early leaders is a high point.--Wilkinson, Joanne Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Against the backdrop of the Civil War and Ulysses S. Grant's rise to power, historical fiction writer Chiaverini's latest (after 2014's Mrs. Lincoln's Rival) imagines the fractured relationship between Grant's wife, Julia, and an enslaved woman named Jule, who had been a constant in Julia's life since childhood. Raised in Missouri by a slave-holding family, Julia Dent unexpectedly falls for her brother's northern friend. Though he attended West Point, Ulys is a humble soldier who just wants a quiet life as a mathematics professor. He and Julia endure a long courtship as the military often keeps him from her, a way of life that doesn't stop after they marry and the Civil War begins. Chiaverini does a good job of conveying the conflicting nature of Julia and Jule's relationship; despite their closeness, they will never be on even footing. Jule longs for a shot at happiness with groom Gabriel, a fellow slave. Important promises are broken, and Jule's resentment toward Julia grows. When the opportunity arises, Jule flees her former friend, which Julia sees as a betrayal. Careful not to cross paths with the Grants, Jule tries to make a life for herself with her hairdressing skills and keeps tabs as Ulys ascends the ranks of the Union Army. Since the story is filtered through a modern lens, some thoughts and actions occasionally seem anachronistic, but this doesn't detract from an engaging and informative book. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

With her stand-alone Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker, the author of the "Elm Creek Quilts" series proved her ability to weave an engrossing novel that seamlessly entwines history and fiction. However, this volume, which purports to be the story of Julia Dent Grant and her childhood maid, Jule, is titled misleadingly. Although it somewhat chronicles the childhoods of both girls and follows Julia though her marriage to Ulysses S. Grant and widowhood, it is much more a novel about Grant, chronicling in great detail the general's Civil War campaigns, his presidency, private troubles, and death. To be sure, Julia accompanies him throughout, but this does not read like her story. Still Chiaverini's eye for detail coupled with an ability to breathe life into her characters ensures an engrossing period piece that does not fail to both entertain and inform. VERDICT Fans of Civil War fiction and readers who enjoyed the author's other historicals will find this title absorbing. [See Prepub Alert, 9/22/14.]-Pam O'Sullivan, Coll. at Brockport Lib., SUNY (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two Julias, one born into prosperity, the other into slavery, witness the rise of the Civil War and the beginnings of Reconstruction.Chiaverini (Mrs. Lincoln's Rival, 2014, etc.) continues her series of domestic novels detailing the lives of women orbiting President Abraham Lincoln's political sphere. Spymistress Elizabeth Van Lew and dressmaker Elizabeth Keckley, from the author's earlier novels, make cameo appearances. We begin in antebellum Missouri, where Julia Dent, beautiful yet cursed with poor eyesight, grows up with another, enslaved Julia. She relies on her slave to see for her when her eyes tire, yet the dear friends have only the dimmest awareness that their master-slave relationship will cause trouble. The first sign of colliding interests is, of course, their name: Only one person can have the name "Julia" on the plantation, and that privilege goes to the master's daughter, who renames her bosom companion Jule. Their stories diverge as Julia becomes besotted with then-Lt. Ulysses S. Grant and Jule pines for Gabriel, part-time minister and enslaved stable boy. Julia's is a love story, filled with anxiety for her beloved Grant, whose military expertise and unassailable honor ensure not only his eventual presidency, but also Julia's unshakeable devotion. A woman from a slaveholding household married to a champion of the Union and of abolition, Julia strugglesfor so long that it strains credulityto square her upbringing with the increasingly obvious problems with slavery; even Jule has difficulty making Julia see the value of freedom. Able to read, a gifted hairdresser and determined to make her own mark on society, Jule is an intriguing character. Unfortunately, Julia's tale eclipses Jule's at every turn. Chiaverini's fans will love this light historical romance, but readers hoping for a fully imagined slave-to-freedwoman's journey will be disappointed. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Prologue June 1834 The slaves froze when they heard the old master shouting from the big house, conversations cut off in midsentence, hands grasping spoons hovering between bowls and hungry mouths. Even the little ginger-colored maid strained her ears to listen, dreading to hear her own name bellowed in anger. For a long, tense moment she heard only the crackling of the fire from within the kitchen house and birds chirping overhead, but then Tom shook his head and resumed eating. "It ain't us," the lanky coachman said through a mouthful of oat porridge. "Something happened in the city, but it ain't nothing to do with us." Quickly the slaves finished their breakfasts, scraping their bowls with their carved wooden spoons and licking off every last savory morsel before rising and darting to work. Only the little ginger-colored maid hung back, reluctant to return to the big house and whatever storm brewed within. She busied herself gathering up the dirty bowls and spoons and carrying them to the washbasin, but as she rolled up her sleeves, the cook shook her head. "Poppy can help me with that. You best be running off." Annie was only twenty or thereabouts, but she was the best cook in the Gravois Settlement and proud of it. "Miss Julia be looking for you. Stay out of the old master's way and you be all right." Glumly she nodded and hurried away. She found Miss Julia seated on the front piazza, frowning anxiously at her hands in her lap, a red ribbon bobbing atop her thick, glossy, dark hair in time with the swinging of her feet. She glanced up at the sound of her maid's bare feet on the well-worn path--her expression sweet, her skin soft and rosy--but she held her head awkwardly, tilting it this way and that, trying to fix her gaze on her maid despite her cross-eye. "There you are," Julia cried, bounding out of her seat and down the stairs. She seized her maid's hand and pulled her along, her glossy curls a dark cascade down her back as they ran. The maid's spirits rose as they left the big house behind. She knew where Julia was leading her--to the stables and the family's horses. They heard Gabriel, the stableboy, singing before they reached the corral, before they saw him emerge from the stable, a sturdy, russet-colored boy of ten years leading the missus's favorite bay mare by the reins. The boy with the voice of an angel had been given a name to suit when he had been brought into the Dent household four years before. He had been called Tom then, but the old master had renamed him for the sake of the elder Tom, the ebony-skinned coachman. The maid thought it strange that she had not been given a new name too, since she shared one with her mistress. Instead, ever since the old master had bought her when she was scarcely four years old, the family and slaves had made do by calling her Julia the maid or the little ginger girl or, more often, Black Julia. Side by side, the two Julias stood on the lowest rail and rested their elbows on the corral fence, watching Tom and Gabriel exercise the horses, which Julia adored and rode whenever the old master allowed. When they tired of this, the mistress seized her maid's hand again and they ran off to the kitchen house, another of Miss Julia's favorite places on her family's country estate. Julia could always charm a treat from Annie and never failed to share it. "Ginger and cream," Annie often remarked when she spied the girls' clasped hands, the darker skin against the white. Once, years before, Julia had felt a soft, quick, wetness on the back of her wrist and turned her head in surprise to discover her mistress bent over her hand, the pink tip of her tongue still protruding between her red lips. "I wanted to see if you tasted like ginger too," Julia had said, her expression embarrassed and guilty. "Do I?" "No." Julia had frowned in disappointment. "Just skin. And brine." "I was helping Annie pickle cucumbers." Impulsively, she had lifted Julia's hand to her mouth, her tongue darting out for a small, swift taste. "Hmm." "What? What is it?" "Definitely cream." She had nodded sagely before dissolving into giggles. "The sweetest, freshest cream ever." Julia had laughed, delighted. Annie shooed them away soon enough, and they ran off deep into the woods encircling White Haven, to their favorite, most secret place, a beautiful, shadowy, moss-covered nook near a burbling stream that fed into the Gravois. Julia's favorite game was to pretend that this was a fairy bower and that she was queen of the fairies, ruling fairly and benignly over her kingdom, as confident and gracious in make-believe as she was shy in real life. The ginger maid portrayed her favorite lady-in-waiting, a deposed fairy princess from a far-off kingdom, bearing all the grace of royalty despite her more humble status. When the sun shone high overhead, the maid, her stomach rumbling with hunger, reminded her mistress that Julia would be expected home for lunch. Just as they emerged from the woods, they halted at the sight of a pair of horses tied up at the front post and the old master greeting two men on the shaded piazza. "Soldiers," said Julia, squinting enough to make out their uniforms. "See them for me." "They're officers," her maid replied. Her mistress's poor vision was a source of endless frustration, and she often called upon her maid to describe people and scenes for her, especially at a distance. But even things close to hand, like picture books and sewing, gave her headaches if she were obliged to study them too long. When Julia was first learning to read, after squinting at the reader for a quarter of an hour, her forehead would throb so painfully that she would plaintively ask her maid to see the letters aloud for her. The missus soon put a stop to that, reminding Miss Julia that slaves weren't allowed to read and dismissing her maid with a stern rebuke. "I see that much for myself," said Julia. "What else?" "The tall one is younger," she continued. "He's a lieutenant. The short, stout one has gray hair, and I think he's a captain. I don't think they ever been here before." "They must be from Jefferson Barracks," said Julia, her voice dropping to a murmur. "One of the officers did something terrible." "What he do?" "I don't know. Let's listen." Julia took her hand once more. They darted to the house, tiptoed up the front stairs and down the piazza, and crouched silently beneath one of the parlor windows. What they heard chilled the maid to the bone. A few days before, Major William Harney, the paymaster at Jefferson Barracks, had become enraged with a slave, Hannah, whom he accused of hiding or losing the keys to his sister-in-law's household in St. Louis, where he was residing. He had seized a piece of rawhide and had beaten her savagely upon her head, stomach, sides, back, arms and legs, rendering her unconscious, bruised, and bleeding. Hannah died the following day, and the coroner's jury of inquest noted that her body had been lacerated and mangled in so horrible a manner that they could not determine whether the violence had been committed with whips or hot irons. To avoid arrest--and in advance of a mob of outraged citizens intent on stringing him up--Major Harney had fled the city aboard a steamboat and proceeded to Washington City to request a transfer so he would never have to return to Missouri. The officers had come to warn the old master that anger against slaveholders throughout the county was soaring, and he ought to take care until it subsided. Julia squeezed her hand. "Did you hear? That bad man will never come back. Papa says Washington City is about as far from St. Louis as you can go." She nodded, her throat constricted too much to allow speech, but her heart pounded, her mind flooded with images of a slave woman screaming in anguish as the rawhide cut into her skin, falling to her knees in a pool of her own blood-- She scrambled away from the window and fled to the woods, closing her ears to Julia's beseeching cries. She fled to the safest place she knew, the fairy bower, where she lay down on the soft moss and hugged her knees to her chest. Before long Julia arrived, breathless and anxious. "I knew you would come here," she said, sitting down beside her. "You mustn't be afraid. What happened to that poor Hannah will never happen to you. I swear I'll never beat you and I won't let anyone else either." She felt a small measure of comfort, enough to compel her to sit up and wipe the tears from her face. But she knew Julia was just a little girl, eight years old like herself, and incapable of fighting off anyone who might want to hurt her. "I don't like it when people call you Black Julia," the young mistress suddenly declared. "It's not a proper name, even for a servant. But you can't be Julia, because I was Julia first." She didn't contradict her, although she was the elder by two months and so had been called Julia longer. Her mistress was the first to be called Julia at White Haven, and she was a Dent. It was fair that she kept the name. "I'm going to call you Jule," she said. "It's almost Julia, but different enough so no one will need to put anything else before it to tell us apart. Do you like it?" "Yes," said Jule, after a long moment. "It's nice." "Then Jule it is," Julia proclaimed, beaming. Jule was proud of her new name. It wasn't quite as well earned as Gabriel's, or as fancy as Suzanne's, but it was nice, and it was hers alone. "Miss Julia says we all supposed to call me Jule now," she told Annie that night as the weary slaves gathered at the kitchen house to eat their supper, deferred while the Dents and the livestock were seen to. "Really." Scooping stew into bowls, Annie gave her an inscrutable sidelong look. "You proud of that odd name, ginger girl?" "It ain't odd," said Jule, lifting her chin. "Some girls called Ruby or Opal or Pearl. Why can't I be called Jewel?" One of the field hands guffawed into his stew; it might have been Dan, but she couldn't tell in the darkness, which on that moonless night was lifted only by the light spilling from the kitchen-house doorway and the campfire Tom and Gabriel had built. "It's pretty," piped up Suzanne, the housekeeper's walnut-colored daughter. She would be the maid for Julia's next-eldest sister someday but as yet was too young to be much more than a playmate. "Pretty, huh?" Still clutching her spoon, Annie planted a fist on her hip and regarded Jule from beneath raised brows. "You ain't called jewel like no pearl or sparkling ruby. You called Jule to be short for Julia." "Annie," chided Tom mildly. "She's just a girl." "She's eight years old, old enough to know how things are. She ain't got no mamma, so it falls to me to tell her." Annie's expression turned solemn as she crouched low beside Jule and held her gaze. "Listen here. Your new name just a piece of her name, just like she think you no more than a little piece of her. There's us, and there's them, and you one of us." "I know that," said Jule sullenly. "No, I don't think you do. Listen, ginger girl. You ain't never gonna be a part of that family, no matter what Miss Julia say now, no matter how she hold your hand and tell you she love you. Soon Miss Nell gonna be old enough to be a real friend and not just a pesky little sister, and as years go by you gonna be less a friend and more a slave. It always happen that way. Unless you want your heart broke, you best get ready and watch for it coming, so it don't catch you by surprise." Miss Julia was different, Jule told herself fiercely, interlacing her fingers over her growling stomach as Annie filled bowls with stew and she waited for one to be passed her way. Miss Julia was different, and Jule was different. They were ginger and cream. It was not their fault they were mistress and slave too. Excerpted from Mrs. Grant and Madame Jule by Jennifer Chiaverini All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.