Dear George, Dear Mary

Mary Calvi, 1969-

Large print - 2019

""Love is said to be an involuntary passion, and it is, therefore, contended that it cannot be resisted." --George Washington Did unrequited love spark a flame that ignited a cause that became the American Revolution? Never before has this story about George Washington been told. Crafted from hundreds of letters, witness accounts, and journal entries, Dear George, Dear Mary explores George's relationship with his first love, New York heiress Mary Philipse, the richest belle in Colonial America. From elegant eighteenth-century society to bloody battlefields, the novel creates breathtaking scenes and riveting characters. Dramatic portraits of the two main characters unveil a Washington on the precipice of greatness, using ...the very words he spoke and wrote, and his ravishing love, whose outward beauty and refinement disguise a complex inner struggle. Dear George, Dear Mary reveals why George Washington had such bitter resentment toward the Brits, established nearly two decades before the American Revolution, and it unveils details of a deception long hidden from the world that led Mary Philipse to be named a traitor, condemned to death and left with nothing. While that may sound like the end, ultimately both Mary and George achieve what they always wanted."--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographical fiction
Historical fiction
Large print books
Published
Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, a Cengage Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Mary Calvi, 1969- (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
515 pages (large print) ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 503-507).
ISBN
9781432865450
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Long before the Revolutionary War 1756, to be precise young George Washington is making a name for himself as a military leader in New York. He has no money or education, nothing but ambition and his good name, which he tends carefully. Broadcast journalist Calvi's first novel draws on public and personal documents to provide details not only on Washington's battles with the French and Indians and his skirmishes with his British superiors but also on his own high standards. To that end, a match with Mary Philipse, an heiress a few years older than him, seems perfect. He proposes; she accepts. But when George can't get leave, Mary's battle with depression resurfaces and makes her act in unpredictable ways. Calvi's portrait of Washington as an earnest young man striving for success but beleaguered on every front is convincing and, in a way, endearing. It is also a fascinating and unique look at pre-Revolutionary War society, with its misunderstandings and simmering resentments, and notable for the author's use of contemporaneous documents.--Jeanne Greene Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

Calvi's debut skillfully depicts the ill-fated love story of a promising 24-year-old colonel named George Washington and Mary Eliza Philipse, a melancholy New York heiress. Even before meeting him at a ball in 1756, Mary already idolizes George, having read his journal in the newspapers. Mary believes herself cursed after losing, over time, her younger sister, father, and mother, and she fears that this curse will sully her happiness with George, with whom she makes an instant connection. Together they begin their courtship. George is assigned to lead the construction of a fort in Virginia, and during the 19 months he's separated from Mary, he's slandered in the press for "vice and debauchery," denied leave by his superiors, and given inadequate means to defend his post. He's written to Mary but hasn't heard back from her; Mary, meanwhile, rejects endless suitors while wondering why George hasn't written or visited. While Calvi's writing is flowery and rife with exposition (she's particularly clunky at interjecting excerpts from source material into George's thoughts), her narrative is affecting. Some 20 years pass before George and Mary reunite during the Revolutionary War and Mary discovers the truth about what kept them apart. The bittersweet ending is a fitting conclusion to a story that will appeal to readers of romance and historical fiction. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved