In recent decades the Ann Rutledge story has been treated as mythical
rather than as an account of Abraham Lincoln's first but doomed love
affair. In The Shadows Rise, the first book-length treatment of the
subject, John Evangelist Walsh restores Ann Rutledge to her rightful
place in the historical record.
In 1945 the noted Lincoln scholar James G. Randall stated in his Lincoln
biography that no real evidence existed to confirm Lincoln's love for
Ann or the tales of his profound grief at her early death. Later, in the
1990s, John Y. Simon and Douglas Wilson began the rehabilitation of
Rutledge with a reexamination of Herndon's papers.
Now, in The Shadows Rise, Walsh transcends and transforms recent
research, re-creating the Lincoln-Rutledge story in all its dramatic
fullness and depth. Along with new material and new interpretations he
supplies some old-fashioned common sense. Highlights include convincing
reconstructions of Lincoln's New Salem friends and Walsh's fresh
examination of the Mary Owens affair, in which Lincoln's offer of
marriage was refused.