Louisa Treger on her historical novel starring Pittsburgh's own Nellie Bly

Description

Based on a true story, a spellbinding historical novel about the world's first female investigative journalist, Nellie Bly.

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In 1887, young Nellie Bly sets out for New York and a career in journalism, determined to make her way as a serious reporter, whatever that may take.

But life in the city is tougher than she imagined. Down to her last dime and desperate to prove her worth, she comes up with a dangerous plan: to fake insanity and have herself committed to the asylum on Blackwell's Island. There, she will work undercover to expose the asylum's wretched conditions.

But when the asylum door swings shut behind her, she finds herself in a place of horrors, governed by a cruelty she could never have imagined. Cold, isolated and starving, her days of terror reawaken the traumatic events of her childhood. She entered the asylum of her own free will - but will she ever get out?

An extraordinary portrait of a woman ahead of her time, Madwoman is the story of a quest for the truth that changed the world.

Louisa Treger has a PhD in English from University College London, focusing on early-twentieth-century women’s writing. She is the author of The Dragon Lady and lives in London.

Lisa Tetrault is associate professor of history at Carnegie Mellon University. She specializes in the history of gender, race, and American democracy, with a focus on social movements and memory. Her first book, The Myth of Seneca Falls: Memory and the Women's Suffrage Movement, 1848-1898 won the Organization of American Historians' inaugural Mary Jurich Nickliss women's history book prize.