The President's Wife Audiobook By Tracey Enerson Wood cover art

The President's Wife

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The President's Wife

By: Tracey Enerson Wood
Narrated by: Libby McKnight
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About this listen

They called her the First Lady. They should have referred to her as Madame President. Discover the woman who stepped up and saved her husband—and her country

When widowed Washington, D.C., socialite Edith Bolling meets President Woodrow Wilson, the attraction is immediate. A whirlwind romance results in a proposal of marriage, which Edith happily accepts—along with the important role of First Lady. By the end of the Great War, Edith is accompanying her husband to Europe for peace talks, meeting heads of state and dealing with foreign affairs. But something is wrong with Woodrow.

During several meetings, he seems to lose concentration and looks confused, leaving her to manage on her own. As time goes on, his condition worsens, ultimately resulting in a devastating stroke. Unwilling to let her husband’s presidency fail, Edith steps in behind the scenes, supporting Woodrow in every way while concealing his true condition to all except the most trusted advisors. But leading a country in turmoil is a thankless job—especially as a woman—and serving incognito as President could take everything she has.

©2023 Tracey Enerson Wood (P)2023 Recorded Books
Biographical Fiction Fiction Women's Fiction World War I Marriage First Lady War
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Critic reviews

"Libby McKnight elegantly narrates a fictionalized history of the courtship and marriage of widow Edith Bolling Galt and the 28th U.S. president, widower Woodrow Wilson. McKnight delivers the deeply personal exchanges between the couple with a perfect understanding of the exquisitely romantic Wilson and the uncertain Galt.... McKnight doesn't miss the irony of Edith's advising Woodrow on world affairs when women didn't yet have the right to vote. In this true love story, McKnight humanizes the Wilsons and their tenuous times with subtlety and eloquence." (AudioFile)

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Neither Here Nor There

And actually a bit boring. There was no edge.And she was a tough woman. Perhaps it was the southern accent that made Edith sound so passive. And that’s not what history told us.

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Good not great

I never fully got into this book. Definitely learned more about the Wilsons and the time period but didn’t find them that engaging.

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Edith Wilson was a remarkable woman!

I always enjoy learning about people in history. The story of Edith and Woodrow from her perspective was very enlightening.

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