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Suffrage, Free Love, and the First Woman to Run for President
by Eden Collinsworth
From the acclaimed author of What the Ermine Saw and Behaving Badly, a portrait of Victoria Woodhull, a celebrated and maligned 19th-century businesswoman and activist, and a leader in the fight for women's suffrage and labor reforms.
In 1894, a remarkably self-possessed American woman, with no formal education to speak of, stood before a British court seeking damages for libel from the trustees of the British Museum. It was yet another stop along the unpredictable route that was Victoria Woodhull's life. Born dirt-poor in an obscure Ohio settlement, Woodhull was the daughter of an illiterate mother entranced by the fad of Mesmerism—a therapeutic pseudoscience—and a swindler father whose cons exploited his two daughters. It was through her mother, though, that Woodhull familiarized herself with the supernatural realm, earning a degree of fame as a clairvoyant and her first taste of financial success. Woodhull's life would continue to turn on its axis and then turn again.
Despite a deeply troubled first marriage at the age of fourteen, countless attempts by the press to discredit her, and a wrongful jail sentence, Woodhull thrived through sheer determination and the strength of her bond with her sister Tennie. She co-founded a successful stock brokerage on Wall Street, launched a newspaper, and became the first woman to run for president. Hers was a rags-to-riches story that saw her cross paths with Karl Marx, Henry Ward Beecher, and Frederick Douglass. In an era when women's rights were circumscribed, and the idea of leaving a marriage was taboo, she broke the rules to carve out a path of her own.
Vividly written and exhaustively researched, Collinsworth tells the story of a woman truly ahead of her time—a radical visionary who made defying mores a habit and brought to the fore societal and political issues still being addressed today. Neither a saint nor a villain, Woodhull emerges as an iconic, complex woman: an entrepreneur; lover of freedom; and a fiercely loyal family member whose political activism and suffragist legacy will cement her in history.
What are you reading this week? And what did you think of last week’s books? (11/6/2025)
I just finished Black Wolf and it is a banger! Now reading The Improbable Victoria Woodhull by Eden Collinsworth and listening to The Sinners All Bow by Kate Winkler Dawson.
-Anne_Glasgow
"A highly recommended, well-researched biography that brings Woodhull and her achievements to life." —Library Journal (starred review)
"Collinsworth deftly weaves in the political, economic, social, and moral ethos of the nineteenth century as she tells the fascinating story of a remarkable woman." —Booklist (starred review)
"[A] beguiling biography of Victoria Woodhull (1838–1927), a groundbreaking and enigmatic figure in women's history...Collinsworth's Woodhull is captivating...A transfixing character study." —Publishers Weekly
"A zesty biography of a colorful woman in the raucous Gilded Age." —Kirkus Reviews
"[A] fast-paced, dramatic narrative...Collinsworth conveys Woodhull's story with gusto, traversing continents and, along the way, running into such notable figures as Marx, Henry Ward Beecher and Frederick Douglass. Overall, Collinsworth's enthusiasm for her subject is infectious, and The Improbable Victoria Woodhull is a splendid account of a unique woman who was ahead of her time, and perhaps ours too." —BookPage
"The Improbable Victoria Woodhull takes the reader on a whirlwind tour of 19th-Century America in this rags to riches tale of two beautiful con artists who rose from the backwaters of Ohio to conquer British society. Victoria Woodhull was a truly original American character." —Debby Applegate, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Most Famous Man in American: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher
"The Improbable Victoria Woodhull shows how far we have come—and how far there is to go—in pursuit of a fairer and kinder society. Eden Collinsworth's engaging biography brings Victoria to life in all her glorious contradictions and enthusiasms. She was worth ten of the men around her. Time spent with Victoria is time well spent indeed." —Amanda Foreman, National Book Critics Circle Award winner and author of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
This information about The Improbable Victoria Woodhull was first featured
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Eden Collinsworth is a writer, essayist, novelist, former media executive, and business consultant. At twenty-eight, she was appointed president and publisher of Arbor House. She left the book business in 1990 to launch the Los Angeles–based lifestyle magazine, BUZZ. In the third decade of her career, she was appointed vice president and director of Cross Media Business Development at the Hearst Corporation. In 2008, Collinsworth became vice president, chief operating officer, and chief-of-staff of The EastWest Institute, an international think tank, and in 2011, she launched Collinsworth & Associates, a Beijing-based consulting company in intercultural communication. She is the author of a novel, It Might Have Been What He Said; of a memoir, I Stand Corrected: How Teaching Manners in China Became Its Own Unforgettable Lesson; and of Behaving Badly: The New Morality in Politics, Sex, and Business, What the Ermine Saw: The Extraordinary Journey of Leonardo da Vinci's Most Mysterious Portrait, and The Improbable Victoria Woodhull: Suffrage, Free Love, and the First Woman to Run for President.

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