
First-person accounts lend immediacy and freshness to a lucidly written, well-researched account that is neither a romantic version of "a quaint and harmless war" nor "an effort to stand traditional history on its head." Agent, Dan Green. tragic consequences") and African-American women (whose "loyalties were to their own future, not to Congress or to king"). traitors"), Native American women (for whom "an American victory would have. Berkin reaches beyond white "American" women to chart the experiences of Loyalist women ("targets of Revolutionary governments eager to confiscate the property of. Generals' wives, "admired while the ordinary camp followers were often scorned," accompanied their husbands in different style they boosted morale with dinner parties and dancing. Berkin takes us into the ordinary moments of extraordinary lives. Camp followers (often soldiers' wives) provided logistical support (cooking, washing, sewing, nursing, finding supplies) and occasionally even fought prostitutes kept up soldiers' sexual (and social) morale. The American Revolution was a home-front war that brought scarcity, bloodshed, and danger into the life of every American, and Carol Berkin shows us that women played a vital role throughout the struggle. Early forms of resistance included boycotting British cloth-and thus dusting off retired spinning wheels-and tea as women used "their purchasing power as a political weapon." As the conflict became a war in city streets and the neighboring countryside, houses became war zones ordinary women often served as spies, saboteurs and couriers.


) offers a lively account of women's various roles in the long, bloody conflict.

Confronting "the gender amnesia that surrounds the American Revolution," historian Berkin ( A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution
