Reviews
"An excellent treatment of the roles of Mormon women from the late 19th century to the present ... Highly recommended." -- T. G. Alexander, CHOICE
"In lively prose and with scholarly finesse, Colleen McDannell has 'modernized' Mormon women. Especially notable is her careful balancing of official pronouncement with first-person accounts, including those taken from her own oral history interviews." --Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, author of A House Full of Females: Mormon Diaries, 1830-1870
"Sister Saints is marvelous. In the hands of Colleen McDannell, one of our leading interpreters of American religion, the history of twentieth-century Mormon women shines. Too long reduced in the popular mind to silent sufferers, modern Mormon women are revealed here in their complexity as leaders and innovators, feminists and antifeminists, mothers and marchers, intellectuals and homemakers. Essential reading for Mormon history, women's history, and American religious and cultural history." --Patrick Q. Mason, Howard W. Hunter Chair of Mormon Studies and Dean of the School of Arts and Humanities, Claremont Graduate University
"Colleen McDannell's illuminating book makes clear how big a part women played in Mormon history. The story is never complete without them. Everyone who wants to understand where contemporary Mormonism is coming from will need to read this clear-headed, even-handed account." --Richard Bushman, author of Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling
"From Emmeline Wells to Neylan McBaine, from Fanny Stenhouse to Sonia Johnson, Sister Saints offers a probing and deeply insightful survey of the last century of Mormon women's history. McDannell's ability to situate the tradition within a larger story of American social change is testimony to her talents as a historian as well the vibrant and elastic nature of Mormon women's lives. An indispensable resource." -- Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Archer Alexander Distinguished Professor in the Humanities, Washington University in St. Louis
"Colleen McDannell's newest book, Sister Saints: Mormon Women since the End of Polygamy, unearths the diverse lives of modern Mormon women to demonstrate the complex ways that women navigate their spiritual lives in the face of a constantly changing cultural context. By placing the history of women first, rather than as a supplement to the history of male leadership, McDannell takes the study of Mormonism in new directions and invites future scholars to do the same." -- Reading Religion
"How McDannell successfully delivers is also noteworthy. A perennial challenge for historians of twentieth-century Mormonism has been sources. While church growth expanded an order of magnitude, the number accessible minute books, diaries, and manuscript collections contracted. While still leveraging these sources where available McDannell overcomes lacunae and finds impressive tractions in oral histories, both in interviews she conducted and in existing repositories . . . [the book] is buttressed with smooth and witty prose. Check it out." -- By Common Consent
"Mormon women have come a long way, according to Colleen McDannell . . . That's one overall takeaway from McDannell's outstanding new history Sister Saints: Mormon Women Since the End of Polygamy, which just came out from Oxford University Press . . . I hope the book gets a wide readership. It's not only carefully researched but accessibly written . . . filled with compelling stories and "wait, what?!" bits of historical detail. You could actually give this to your Relief Society president for Christmas - and I hope you will." -- Jana Riess, Religion News Service
"Colleen McDannell's newest book, Sister Saints: Mormon Women since the End of Polygamy, unearths the diverse lives of modern Mormon women to demonstrate the complex ways that women navigate their spiritual lives in the face of a constantly changing cultural context. By placing the history of women first, rather than as a supplement to the history of male leadership, McDannell takes the study of Mormonism in new directions and invites future scholars to do the same." -- Reading Religion
"The book is a must-read for everyone interested in gender issues in Mormonism and an excellent choice for scholars in Gender Studies. An outstanding work." -- Hans Gerald Hodl, Religious Studies Review