Renee Bergland teaches English and Gender/Cultural Studies at Simmons College and holds a research appointment in Women's and Gender Studies at Harvard. President of the New England American Studies Association and a former Fulbright scholar, she received a ""We the People"" grant from the NEH for her work on Maria Mitchell. She is author of The National Uncanny- Indian Ghosts and American Subjects, and co-editor (with Gary Williams) of Philosophies of Sex- Critical Essays on the Hermaphrodite. She has also written for the Boston Globe, L.A. Times, and Washington Post.
The best thing in its line since Dava Sobel's Longitude. Bergland tells a great, if too little known, story of an intellectual woman in nineteenth-century New England. And it is beautifully told: I simply could not put it down. Anyone who cares about women's education in America should read this compelling and indispensable book. --Robert D. Richardson, author of Henry Thoreau: A Life of the Mind, Emerson: The Mind on Fire, and William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism Ren e Bergland recounts the story of Maria Mitchell's life and work in glorious and careful detail. One feels and hears the sounds of Mitchell's native Nantucket and her adopted Vassar, and comes to understand how one of the 'gentler sex' advanced astronomy in her day. --Londa Schiebinger, author of Has Feminism Changed Science?