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Pure Wit: The Revolutionary Life of Margaret Cavendish

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A biography of the remarkable, and in her time scandalous, seventeenth-century writer Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle.

'My ambition is not only to be Empress, but Authoress of a whole world' - Margaret Cavendish

Margaret Cavendish, then Lucas, was born in 1623 to an aristocratic family. In 1644, as England descended into civil war, she joined the court of the formidable Queen Henrietta Maria at Oxford. With the rest of the court she went into self-imposed exile in France. Her family's wealth and lands were forfeited by Parliament. It was in France that she met her much older partner, William Cavendish, Marquess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, a marriage that would remain at the heart of both her life and career.

Cavendish was a passionate writer. She wrote extensively on gender, science, philosophy, and published under her own name at a time when women simply did not do so. Her greatest work was The Blazing World, published in 1666, a utopian proto-novel that is thought to be one of the earliest works of science fiction. Yet hers is a legacy that divides opinion. And history has largely forgotten her, an undeserved fate for a brilliant, courageous proto-feminist.

In Pure Wit, Francesca Peacock shines a spotlight on the fascinating, pioneering, yet often complex and controversial life of Margaret Cavendish.

384 pages, Hardcover

First published September 14, 2023

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About the author

Francesca Peacock

1 book3 followers
Francesca Peacock is an author and arts journalist. She writes art criticism, book reviews, and features for The Telegraph, The Times, The FT, The Mail on Sunday, Literary Review, The Spectator World, Poetry London, and a host of other publications. Francesca has appeared on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row to discuss her journalism.

Francesca read English at Oxford, where she fell in love with early modern women’s writing through the rather incongruous medium of gardening pamphlets.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Roman Clodia.
2,671 reviews3,770 followers
May 12, 2023
This is an engaging introduction to Margaret Cavendish for a general audience who are unlikely to have heard of her. Cavendish's The Blazing World is extraordinary for its radical approach to re-making the world in a kind of seventeenth century sci-fi... as well as being more than a little eccentric and dotty! Worm-men, anyone?!

Peacock writes in a lively way and conjures up Cavendish's social world very well. However, I think I'm not the right audience for this popular historical biography which had me fidgeting restlessly for the way it simplifies historicised terms and concepts. For example, Cavendish certainly plays with the idea of women loving other women (not radical or unusual in this period: think of a play like Twelfth Night) but to call it 'lesbianism' is anachronistic and misleading.

Similarly, there's not much point discussing Cavendish as a 'feminist' or even 'proto-feminist' because these modern terms of reference just don't transfer in any straightforward way to the seventeenth century. Cavendish, the Duchess of Newcastle, certainly was a standout figure in society and contested some ideas about marriage but she wouldn't have been out in the streets campaigning for universal suffrage or caring for the plight of non-aristocratic women, I suspect. In fact, it's her aristocratic status that partly both funds her interests in science and enables her eccentricity. She was close to Charles I, went into exile with his queen, and was a staunch royalist throughout the Civil Wars - a believer in the divine right of kings rather than parliament as the representative of the people.

Even the way she is talked about as radically independent when it comes to writing could be usefully qualified: plenty of women wrote in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, some of them wrote under their own names in equally bold ways (Mary Wroth, for example, the niece of Mary Sidney who also wrote and translated from French). But perhaps I'm being too critical because this isn't positioning itself as an academic study.

For a general audience this is a witty and lively romp through the life of the wayward and endearingly oddball woman who was Margaret Cavendish.

Thanks to Head of Zeus for an ARC via NetGalley
Profile Image for Steve Donoghue.
186 reviews579 followers
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January 14, 2024
It's only when you dig into the details of Margaret Cavendish's life that you start to get a sense of how remarkable she was -- you might not have wanted to know her, but you'd have been fascinated to hear the latest gossip about her (not to mention eagerly reading her new book). She's been the subject of a handful of biographies, and to that list Francesca Peacock adds this book, her nonfiction debut - a delightfully readable thing. Here's my full review (of the US edition, which has - believe it or not - a much better dust jacket cover): https://openlettersreview.com/posts/p...
Profile Image for Sam Bizar.
209 reviews6 followers
March 26, 2024
Literary biographies that include "Revolutionary" or "Radical" in their titles are often a sign that something is amiss. With this one, I think the subject was revolutionary, but not in the ways that Peacock every seriously considers. There's a lot of "oohing" and "aahing" at how Cavendish had the gumption to write about and to contemporary thinkers of her day: Henry More, Thomas Hobbes, Descartes, etc. But, Peacock is so charmed by the gumption herself that she never really considers the implications of what the Duchess of Newcastle has to say, beyond the mandatory summary of "vitalist materialism." Margaret Cavendish, cheeky and bold, becomes an object of fascination, not a rightful subject of her own literary biography. Peacock tells the reader to take Cavendish seriously, but she never really does it herself.

Other reviewers have noted that there's already been a mainstream biography of Cavendish; Peacock's doesn't add much, except some striking juxtapositions (the obligatory Virginia Woolf, who denigrated Cavendish, the Bronte sisters, bell hooks, etc.). How similar this book is to Mad Madge, I can't comment--I haven't read it. Danielle Dutton also wrote a pretty good novel about Margaret Cavendish, which I have read. There's certainly a lot to enjoy here for readers who are unfamiliar with Cavendish, and Peacock's prose is extremely readable and leisurely. But, the book's argument hinges on the idea that it is interesting and important to point to and gawk at a woman who led a non-traditional life. But is it?

Margaret Cavendish's life was interesting. But that's not what makes her a compelling figure to me. She wrote profusely, and her writing reveals quite a lot about early modern anxieties about gender, about friendship, about the environment, etc. Her ideas often were deeply radical. They were also human, thoughtful, and complex. Her work expresses an interest in endless potentiality, in infinities. I have decidedly mixed feelings about this book, as the Guardian critic Rachel Cooke, but Cooke and I have diverging qualms: where she's uninterested in the philosophical ideas of Cavendish, I wanted the book to be somehow grounded in more of this--it was, after all, the argument that Peacock seems to be advancing, no?

Perhaps here's the issue: Peacock wants to present Margaret Cavendish as a #girlboss feminist, and as an early modern genderfuck crusader. In that way, she aims to illuminate a rather complicated life, but in so doing it becomes simple and recognizable (and recognizably cliche) to her present readers. How many books are there about women who defied expectations? And what, did they defy exactly? That never seems to matter--what matters is that we can pluck an ostensibly obscure woman (which, is Margaret Cavendish actually that obscure? I'd read The Blazing World well before I'd seen it on a syllabus) out of history and say "look, how outrageous!" This is a reductive history, of singling out viragos as they come, and calling them feminist because they are...women. We know these women. We've read about them before. Why not have a Cavendish who isn't entirely comprehensible? Why not have a Cavendish who lived a life that was interesting in its own right, but which cannot simply be paired with 20th and 21st century corollaries?

Ultimately, if my lukewarm reception dissuades readers unfamiliar with Cavendish, I would say that they should give this book a try. Peacock's writing is breezy, and the book is well-paced and often fun. But I don't think that it establishes its conclusions well or editorializes in ways that are particularly illuminating. Even if I didn't find the book particularly convincing, I cannot say that I had a bad time reading this (though, I did roll my eyes every so often...particularly Peacock's reductive reading of Milton).
Profile Image for Brendan (History Nerds United).
597 reviews269 followers
July 16, 2023
Pure Wit by Francesca Peacock is an example of when a writer takes on a subject perfectly suited to their skills. Pure Wit is about the life of Margaret Cavendish, a noblewoman and writer in England during the years before and after the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Needless to say, this time period is full of interesting events, but the fact that Cavendish was a women and a writer is the story here. I cannot, unless I make this review excessively long, sum up Cavendish appropriately. She was an early feminist but also not really. Her books are both deeply thoughtful and a bit ridiculous. She defies a short description.

Luckily, Peacock is up to the task and then some. The book is mostly a high level overview of the time period Cavendish lived, plus a short biography, plus literary criticism. Many authors would end up with an absolute mess of tangents and bungled narrative. Peacock's ability to balance many different tones is key to why this book is so readable. Peacock knows when to take her subject seriously, but also will lighten the mood and poke fun at things which are patently ridiculous, including Cavendish herself. The key here is that Peacock clearly has affection for Cavendish, but is not above criticizing her when necessary. I had no idea what to expect when I opened the book, but I didn't need to worry. This is a fun read.

(This book was provided as an advance copy by Netgalley and Head of Zeus books.)
Profile Image for Broken Lifeboat.
159 reviews1 follower
February 25, 2024
Was excited to read this biography of Margaret Cavendish, a 17th century female poet, author, philosopher and scientist, proto-radical feminist and arguably the first female sci-fi writer but this book lost my interest due to the writing.

The author repeatedly and annoyingly uses a question to transition - stuff like "How did Margaret do this thing?" And then tells us how Margaret did the thing. Is there a more irritating writing device? For the purposes of this review, no, no there isn't.

Peacock isn't always clear on her point often wandering into comparisons of women authors before, during and after Cavendish's time and examining her prose in a subjective and speculative way that just gave me the snoozes.

Cavendish is a fascinating character but this book doesn't add a lot of new insight. It's okay but I wouldn't re-read.
Profile Image for Jeanette.
3,678 reviews736 followers
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February 26, 2024
No rating because I made this a DNF about 1/2 the way through. Too circular and the writing is just plain poor in continuity and in core connection to the title.

I did like the photo section. You may want to try it if you understand and jibe with this era and placement. But even then you might not concur with the voice or the tangents.
Profile Image for Bethany Swafford.
Author 13 books85 followers
October 3, 2023
Born into aristocracy in 1623, Margaret Cavendish defied societal norms by writing extensively on gender, science, and philosophy under her own name during a turbulent period of English history. After joining Queen Henrietta Maria's court during the English Civil War, she endured exile in France and formed a lasting partnership with William Cavendish, Marquess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Her magnum opus, "The Blazing World," published in 1666, is considered an early work of science fiction. In "Pure Wit," Francesca Peacock sheds light on the captivating and pioneering life of Margaret Cavendish, a brilliant proto-feminist whose legacy remains a subject of debate and often overshadowed by history.

When I first saw this, I was interested to learn more about what the first science fiction could be. I was also intrigued to know more about this writer, since I had never heard of her before. However, to be honest, I hadn’t heard of many of the comparison writers the author included.

I was expecting more of a biography about her life, but what this felt like was more of a discussion about Margaret Cavendish’s philosophy, which I have little interest in. While the events of Margaret Cavendish’s early life inspire sympathy, I didn’t find much to admire about much of her life, with her outlandish dress (putting her breasts on display) and declaring herself a princess. I found myself slogging through most of this book.

Clearly, I was not the intended reader for this book. Others may find it more interesting than I did.
I was given an advance copy through NetGalley for reviewing purposes. All opinions expressed are my own.
147 reviews8 followers
September 19, 2023
Francesca Peacock’s Pure Wit: The Revolutionary Life of Margaret Cavendish covers not just the life of Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, (1623-73), but also discusses her books and philosophy. Peacock insists that Cavendish was really shy; and that’s why she was such an extrovert. However, I am unconvinced that we can apply the adjective “shy” to anyone who went to the theatre in 1667 wearing such a low-cut dress that her breasts (“with scarlet-trimmed nipples”) were “all laid out to view”. Before that, Samuel Pepys had written “The whole story of this lady is a romance, and all she do is romantic”. However, after he met her at the Royal Society, he stated that he “did not like her at all.” Virginia Woolf wrote, almost four hundred years later, “the crazy Duchess became a bogey to frighten clever girls with.” Subsequent biographers, such as Mark Lower and Katie Whitaker, have christened her “Mad Madge”. Peacock vehemently rejects that nickname and tries to persuade us that Cavendish was simply unappreciated and denigrated by the patriarchy.

Margaret Lucas was twenty-two when she met William Cavendish, the Duke of Newcastle, who was thirty years older than her. It was definitely a love match – it appears he was besotted with her. Although they were not Catholics, they supported the Royalist cause and thus went into exile overseas with the Carolingian court. William had been Charles II’s tutor and Margaret was a lady-in-waiting to his queen, Henrietta Maria.

The book does a good job of showing us Margaret Cavendish’s heart-breaking life prior to Charles II’s restoration. The Civil War was brutal. In 1648, the Roundheads laying siege to Colchester broke open the vault of St John’s Abbey; cut off the hair of Margaret’s recently deceased mother and sister; and pranced around, using the hair as wigs, before scattering the bones of other decomposed ancestors. Margaret’s brother, Sir Charles Lucas, was shot by the Roundheads when the siege ended. However, the author is very keen to discuss Cavendish’s philosophy, as evidenced in the books she wrote in exile and after her return to England. Although this is a biography of Cavendish, in that we’re given her life story, a significant part of the book discusses her literary work – and part of that delves quite deeply into her philosophy. I confess that I’m not really interested in Cavendish’s views about the relationship between God and Nature and the types of matter, especially as Cavendish’s views appear to have changed direction as easily as a weathercock.


I scribbled “It seems a bit all over the place” and “Why not chronological order?” but I also noted, “There is a good mixture of analysis, discussing female authors; their reasons for writing and publishing (and Peacock does an excellent job of explaining why the two were different); and the narrative about Margaret. And so, do I recommend this book? The biographical material doesn’t appear to add much beyond Katie Whitaker’s 2003 book. Peacock is obviously on a mission: to espouse Cavendish as a philosopher on a par with Locke and Spinoza, but ignored because she was female; and to position her as a great C17th writer. I admire her devotion to Cavendish but I’m afraid I am not persuaded of Cavendish’s superiority in any field. However, read the book for yourself; learn about an undoubtedly unique, confident, woman; get an insight into some robust C17th philosophical debates; and decide whether Margaret was misunderstood, maligned and denigrated because she was a woman; or whether she was a trail-blazing, brilliant, shooting star who burned out far too early. Cavendish wrote, “All I desire is fame, and fame is nothing but a great noise” - Peacock succeeds in ensuring there will be a fresh debate about Margaret Cavendish, 350 years after she died. I’m sure Margaret would be delighted.


#PureWit #NetGalley
Profile Image for Chris L..
118 reviews5 followers
May 14, 2023
In Francesca Peacock's "Pure Wit," she sets out to give Margaret Cavendish (Duchess of Newcastle) her proper due as a writer, philosopher and ancestor to later feminist writers. (Peacock points out that "feminist" would not be a term used in the seventeenth century). Peacock connects Cavendish to the chaotic political shenanigans of the seventeenth century because a significant portion of Margaret Cavendish's life was spent dealing with the upheaval between Charles I's execution, the interregnum, and the restoration of Charles II. She points out that Cavendish and her husband William were financially wiped out by their support for the Royalist cause.

A good deal of Cavendish's most well-known work was done during this time so Peacock astutely connects the Cavendish's fortunes with the perilous political fighting of her day. Unlike other biographers or English lit scholars, Peacock does not remove Cavendish from her time. She makes sure that we understand the world Cavendish lived, loved and wrote in. She rescues Margaret Cavendish from the misbegotten idea that somehow she was just a silly or mentally unbalanced woman who wrote poems

Peacock writes in a precise manner that puts Cavendish at the forefront. She goes through all of Cavendish's work to show the talent, the intelligence, the contradictions, the confusions, the classism, etc. Peacock does an excellent job of quoting Cavendish's work, and contrasting it with the criticism, or of how she was edited after her death. It's an enlightening way of approaching Cavendish's writing because she shows how much Cavendish had to fight to be taken seriously.

Even today, the idea of the neurotic Margaret Cavendish persists. Francesca Peacock does not paint Cavendish as a saint, but as a multifaceted woman with an extraordinary gift for writing and self-promotion. Peacock treats Cavendish with the respect and understanding she deserves. The biography made me want to read and reread Margaret Cavendish's work, and that's the mark of a first-rate biographer.
Profile Image for Laura.
170 reviews
July 30, 2023
Published in the UK on the 14th Sept. Grateful to NetGalley for access to an advanced copy.

I went in to this book expecting to read about a 17th century Kim Kardashian. It didn't disappoint, for Margaret Cavendish was just as polarising a figure in her time. A sadly familiar story of a woman's efforts to be taken seriously in a society determined to devalue her achievements and mock her fashion choices.

Francesca Peacock delves deep in Cavendish's writings to find her, searching for clues even in her handwriting. Much of her life was re-told within her work, it presents her version of events and much can be gleaned (and is artfully explored by Peacock) by events she omitted.

There are the stories of other women here too- the defiant Queen Henrietta Maria- who Cavendish journeyed to serve. The women who found their courage in the midst of civil war from the Bristolian women ready to stand strong against Prince Rupert, to the Countess who refused to surrender her home to the sieging forces. Even the few tales (though much concerned about) women who crossed dressed themselves in to military ranks like the heroines of folk songs.


The book explores her influence on other feminist writers such as Mary Astell and her parallel beliefs with 20th century women's movements. Cavendish is not the perfect feminist and the book doesn't shy away from showing her nuance and contradictions. Should she be of our time now she would make an excellent guest on The Guilty Feminist pod (I'm a feminist but "it is against nature for a woman to spell right").

I could go on an on about the revelations in this book (special mention to Lady Eleanor Butler and The Hon. Sarah Ponsonby who ran off to north Wales and named all their dogs Sapho) but the review will go on forever.

It's brilliant, I loved it, go read it.
287 reviews3 followers
April 21, 2024
I checked this book out of my library.

Brief Summary: This book focuses on the literary contributions of Cavendish and their wider impact on the literary world. Although not the focus of the book Cavendish's life is also examined at various points throughout the book.

Thoughts: I learned quite a bit about Margaret Cavendish's life from this book. I have only encountered her briefly in other books and was interested in diving into a book focused on her life and works. That being said, while I learned things from this book, I did not enjoy it.

Peacock's writing style was fine and overall the book was easy to follow in terms of timeline and cast of characters. However, there was so much discussion about the other significant writers of the period that half the time it did not even feel like I was reading a book about Cavendish.

When a discussion about Cavendish's works was focused on in the book it made me more interested in the book as I have no real foreknowledge of her works. The examination of what was novel about Cavendish's works for the period was interesting as it provided insight into who Cavendish was as a person and what was motivating her to write. I do wish that more of Cavendish's biography had been included in the text to highlight these aspects as the biography often felt disjointed from the discussion of the work she was producing.

Overall, I found this book interesting, but I don't think that it was what I was hoping to get out of a book about Cavendish. I was a little more interested in a biographical perspective of her life and this was a little more literary criticism/examination.

Content Warnings

Graphic description: Infertility, Misogyny, Sexism, Mental illness, and Classism

Minor description: Pandemic/Epidemic and War
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
142 reviews13 followers
February 22, 2024
A colloquial, almost casual, gushy biography of Margaret Cavendish, a very interesting writer and persona from the seventeenth century who deserves more widespread fame.

The style irritated me at first, with its breathy tone and self-consciously irreverent vocabulary (referencing "bitchy" women, for instance) and its chapters guided by ingenuous questions like "How can Cavendish's theory of free will be reconciled with self-moving matter, the world as a 'plenum,' and material, sentient Nature?" However, I thawed as I considered how gushy Margaret's own style is and how past biographies have been academic rather than popular. Margaret deserves more widespread recognition - maybe having someone young and hip to explain and defend her is actually what is needed.

Francesca Peacock launches a passionate defense that I am on board with. Among other tidbits she offers is an argument for considering Margaret a feminist (rather than a "proto-feminist" or some other hedge) and an argument for the possibility that Margaret may have been the first English woman professional writer (that is, the tantalizing possibility that she wrote for money, at least at first). She presents evidence that Margaret's marriage was not necessarily as perfect as it has traditionally been considered. She draws from a variety of cultural nooks and crannies to contextualize Margaret's life and thought in a compelling way. I don't think there's much new here for people who have read other biographies, but for a popular audience who are encountering Margaret for the first time, it's quite effective.
Profile Image for Katrina.
140 reviews6 followers
March 11, 2024
A truly fearless trailblazer, Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, wrote everything from feminist plays and poems to scientific and philosophical treatises in the mid 17th century. She was as outrageous in her dress as she was in her bold (though often startlingly accurate) ideas, and more needs to be written about her. Dismissed throughout the centuries as "eccentric" and "mad", Pure Wit does an outstanding job as instead presenting Cavendish as a forward-thinking, perceptive and intelligent writer.

Author Francesca Peacock is thorough in her writing, almost to the point of digressing a little too much - if Civil War history is not your thing (it's not mine, I don't know why I find it so dull but I do), you may find yourself skipping paragraphs in order to get back to the pieces about Margaret herself.

Honestly, Margaret gave no fucks about the establishment or anyone in it (as a Duchess, she of course had a privilege here very few could access) and had absolutely no qualms about taking the male scientists and philosphers of the day to pieces.

I loved these parts of Pure Wit, and the discussion about earlier feminist writers who probably influenced Cavendish, and inked ideas we'd consider extremely modern. It's almost like women have always argued for their own independence and status but have been shut down or shut up by the self-indulgent writings of their male counterparts! Whod've thunk it?! 😅
Profile Image for Nicole47.
331 reviews
March 11, 2024
I read Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World, originally published in 1666, for my qualifying exams about...17 years ago (OMG), and I remember it being strange and fascinating. The female protagonist gets lost in a storm at sea only to enter a new world, where she becomes an empress and begins taking inventory of all she sees. She seeks a scribe to write her observations down, and she settles on...the author, Margaret Cavendish. The book was early science fiction, a parody of the Royal Society, and a meta-fiction where the protagonist meets a version of the author. It was weird and wonderful. After reading it, I was curious about Cavendish herself, but it was difficult to learn much--even by the early 2000s, not many scholars had seriously written about her.

This book, part biography and part literary criticism, helped me understand Cavendish's life and evolving philosophy. I learned more about the economic and political plights of Royalists like Cavendish during the Interregnum, about the economics of early modern publications, about Cavendish's famed visit to the Royal Society, and about Cavendish's changing understanding of matter and nature. It is difficult to encapsulate Cavendish's life and writing in a single volume, and Peacock is excellent at pointing to clear themes. It took me a while to get through, but overall it was a joy to revisit this strange era in British history and Cavendish's important role in it.
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,395 reviews306 followers
January 23, 2024
I’ve been hearing a lot about Margaret Cavendish just lately. She’s obvious “trending”. So I was delighted to read this comprehensive and well-researched biography of her. She was a remarkable woman, especially for her time, being born in 1623 and growing up to experience both the Civil War and the Restoration. An eccentric by anyone’s standards, she was above all a writer, and this at a time when very few women wrote, or were even literate. And she wrote about everything that came to her attention, including penning what has become to be considered the first science fiction novel, The Blazing World. The biography explores not just Margaret’s life and works, although it does this fully, but also places her in her time and place and discusses the history, society, the politics and culture and the natural philosophy ideas and concepts that Margaret was involved in. The style is lively and accessible and I very much enjoyed it.
732 reviews
May 30, 2024
Very interesting and well written historical novel - many humorous moments in her life.

Margaret Cavendish, then Lucas, was born in 1623 to an aristocratic family. In 1644, as England descended into civil war, she joined the court of the formidable Queen Henrietta Maria at Oxford. With the rest of the court she went into self-imposed exile in France. Her family's wealth and lands were forfeited by Parliament. It was in France that she met her much older partner, William Cavendish, Marquess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, a marriage that would remain at the heart of both her life and career.

Cavendish was a passionate writer. She wrote extensively on gender, science, philosophy, and published under her own name at a time when women simply did not do so. Her greatest work was The Blazing World, published in 1666, a utopian proto-novel that is thought to be one of the earliest works of science fiction.
317 reviews2 followers
February 26, 2024
An engaging and readable account of a unique personality who made a splash in 17th century England. She was a writer, poet and eccentric. Not a particularly appealing person, but there is lots of information about the general timeframe that I am happy to have learned.

Since Margaret Cavendish resisted the established roles of women at that time, and since she was prolific writer, the author must contend with the question of whether she was a proto-feminist or not. It's a hard question to answer from a 21st century perspective since Cavendish (as was pointed out repeatedly) was an ardent royalist who believed in a stratified society.
Profile Image for Katie.
927 reviews20 followers
August 15, 2024
I had never heard of Margaret Cavendish until a few months ago, when the author was on a podcast episode about her, so I was excited to get into this. And I thought the book was really well done!

I don't think the use of revolutionary is the most accurate or relevant (because she was a royalist during the English Civil War), but she was a complicated woman publishing under her own name and it was really interesting to hear her life and work being taken seriously. Plus, I don't know anything about the time period she lived in, and I thought the author did a great job of explaining the world that Margaret lived in.
Profile Image for MaryEllen Clark.
231 reviews9 followers
January 10, 2024
An interesting exploration of a most unique 17th century woman, Margaret Cavendish - eccentric, passionate writer of science, gender and philosophy based books. She was controversial in her time and in reviews of her work after her death at age 50. The author does a great job of putting her writings and eccentricities in context for the time and place. Her style is not academic, although well-researched, and so makes for a lively read appropriate for this individual.
Profile Image for Hannah.
167 reviews10 followers
June 1, 2024
This book tries to be so many things - a synopsis of the English Civil War, a traditional biography, a work of literary analysis, and a retrospective of scholarship on Cavendish - that it ultimately becomes confusing. Not even Margaret's period-inappropriate nipple tassels could make me give this a higher rating.
Profile Image for Kami.
106 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2023
1/5 ⭐️ - I am interested in reading some writings by Margaret Cavendish, but for this author Franseca Peacock, I didn't like some of the areas she dove in to. I felt she could have given the basics without the detail. Too much info for me, so I lost interest after that.
Profile Image for Catalina.
843 reviews42 followers
October 3, 2023
I am as I am, MARGARET NEWCASTLE

Ah, a woman after my own heart. A women unafraid to speak her mind and to be herself at the risk of being ridiculed and put down by society. But also a woman courageous enough to better herself, to learn new things and to change her opinions when she had new proof, new information. And not to mentioned she did all this at a time where it was not so easy, no matter how privileged you were, to be different.

I really loved Francesca Peacock's portrait of Margaret Cavendish. I felt she has tried to present us with all her sides, all her contradictions, to show to us a complex woman who has develop across the years. But Peacock also made sense of the historical scene, which added an extra layer to this biography, helping the reader to understand the background and also to place Cavendish in the larger image of Britain in the 17th century.

*Book from NetGalley with many thanks to the publisher for the opportunity!
Profile Image for Annarella.
13.6k reviews150 followers
October 10, 2023
I heard about Margareth Cavendish but never read a biography. It was informative, fascinating and made me learn about an unusual and strong woman.
Recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher for this ARC, all opinions are mine
Profile Image for Sarah Faulkner.
832 reviews1 follower
July 23, 2024
DNF @ 42%. The description sounded fascinating and I think a historical fiction novel (or movie!) about Margaret Cavendish would be amazing. However, thjs particular tome was super academic and dry as dust. Would only recommend for research, not entertainment.
Profile Image for LAErin.
51 reviews4 followers
January 1, 2024
3.5 stars … a bold woman making her mark during an interesting slice of history
Profile Image for T.E..
303 reviews19 followers
February 24, 2024
Really mediocre and took me way too long to read, considering how short the book is for a biography and how comically large the font
Profile Image for Renee.
749 reviews
April 27, 2024
Cavendish was an interesting individual. It was quite radical for a woman to publish anything during the Stuart era much less books on a variety of subjects. After centuries of people trying to put Cavendish into one box or another, Peacock does well in explaining Cavendish's complexity.
2 reviews1 follower
April 16, 2024
Loved it, we talk about women being brave nowadays but you need to set that against the context of the late 1600s and then reframe what brave means! Great story and even better to know she was a real person.
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