![]() The letters shine a light on such aspects of daily life as illness, Sunday sermons and cuisine. Here are trenchant political exchanges, such as Abigail's famous plea to her husband and the Continental Congress to “Remember the Ladies,” and Adams's less famous, revealing reply: he noted that while it was well known that the Revolution had prompted children, slaves and apprentices to rebel, “your Letter was the first Intimation that another Tribe more numerous and powerfull than all the rest were grown discontented.” Many of the letters are personal, from coquettish courtship epistles to Abigail's moving premonition that the baby she was carrying would be stillborn. This edition contains 289 letters covering a longer period of time than the two earlier editions of selected letters. ![]() Hogan and Taylor, editors of the Adams Papers at the Massachusetts Historical Society, have given history buffs a treat-the most comprehensive edition of letters between two extremely lively writers, America's second president and his wife. ![]()
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