"A Life in the Margins," Tom Rue (2025)

In the turbulent shadows of America's Gilded Age and Progressive Era, one woman's life wove through the circles of literary giants, radical reformers, and hidden revolutionaries. The Hidden Woman brings to light the extraordinary yet overlooked journey of Adelaide M. Branch -- a "pretty book agent" turned resilient survivor, who crossed paths with Upton Sinclair, Dr. Marie Equi, Dr. James and Agnes Warbasse, Emma Goldman, and other luminaries of social change.

"Who was Adelaide Branch?," Tom Rue (2025)

Adelaide Mary Branch, later known as Mary Douglas, was born in 1873 into a respected Hartwick family, but refused the genteel life expected of her. After early loss and estrangement, she chose unconventional paths throughout her life -- guided by love and moral conviction rather than social conventions or others' approval. As a child, Addie was a devoted and loving daughter whose parents died before she was fully grown, one by suicide and one of cancer. As an adult, she maintained her caretaker, teacher, and healer core values. An Ohio newspaper quoted her, “As soon as we strip off this little fleshy veil, we are all love for every human soul.” ("Miss Branch Tells Her Story - Heart Mate of Monticello Lawyer Declares She Has No Regrets", Columbus Daily Statesman, December 27, 1913.) A forthcoming biography reconstructs a well-documented portrait of a woman of independent spirit and deep emotion, who defied the conventions of her era, abandoning a privileged lineage in Hartwick, Otsego County, New York, to live

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