04/13/2026
On Thursday, Dr. Elmore brought The Linwoods, written in 1835 by Catharine Maria Sedgwick, to Book Club to celebrate some historical American literature. Dressed in red, white, and blue for the 250th anniversary of America, Dr. Elmore introduced us to a novel “all about American character” and the American values that create the core of the story.
Though one young woman, Isabella Linwood, is the principal character, the story depicts a great variety of courageous characters. Dr. Elmore distinguished two families, the Linwoods and the Lees, and the dynamic they contribute to the story, especially through the contrast of loyalists and rebels in the American Revolution. The Linwood children decide to become revolutionaries alongside the Lees, and risking much to fight for independence, they demonstrate the “ties that bind together humanity,” displaying the unity that makes America beautiful.
As Dr. Elmore leads us to celebrate and remember what led us to America’s celebrations, Sedgwick reminds us of the war that brought us together, and the country that has grown from that unity—nearly two hundred years ago when the book was published, and now.
-Johnna Ryan