Unquiet Women is an exquisitely crafted patchwork of the forgotten
lives of some of the most remarkable women in history.
Wynflæd was an Anglo-Saxon noblewoman who owned male slaves and
badger-skin gowns; Egeria a Gaulish nun who toured the Holy Land as the
Roman Empire was collapsing; Gudrid an Icelandic explorer and the first
woman to give birth to a European child on American soil; Mary Astell a
philosopher who out-thought John Locke.
In this exploration of the lives of women living between the last days
of Rome and the Enlightenment, Max Adams triumphantly overturns the idea
that women of this period were either queens, nuns, or invisible. A
kaleidoscopic study of women's creativity, intellect and influence,
Unquiet Women brings to life the experiences of women whose stories
are all too rarely told. Thanks to its author's rigorous work of rescue
and recovery, their voices can be heard across the centuries--still
passionate and still strong.