Rain Dodging

A Scholar’s Romp through Britain in Search of a Stuart Queen

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on BN.com Buy on Bookshop.org
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Oct 17 2023 | Archive Date Oct 02 2023

Talking about this book? Use #RainDodging #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

Scholar Susan Godwin is hooked when she comes across the captivating story of Mary of Modena—a seventeenth-century Italian princess who was only fourteen when coerced into marriage with the future king of England, James II, yet went on to cultivate a court full of women writers in an age when female authorship was rare. How did Mary achieve such a feat?

Rain Dodging is Susan’s creative nonfiction account of the years-long search upon which this question—and her own unquenchable curiosity—launched her. Godwin travels through both space and time, solo adventuring through Britain in pursuit of truth and, in a spicy parallel arc, chronicling her own cluttered but resilient feminist path. From schizophrenic lovers to out-there musicians to one unhinged mother, Susan tells the story of her personal enlightenment even as she visits the palaces and manor houses in England and Scotland Mary once inhabited and pores over materials in Oxford’s stunning 400-year-old Bodleian Library, finding moments of transcendence and unexpected delight along the way.

Join Susan in this irreverent and illuminating journey—a fascinating account of the late Stuart monarchy, the progression of feminist history, and the unexpected connection between the two.

Scholar Susan Godwin is hooked when she comes across the captivating story of Mary of Modena—a seventeenth-century Italian princess who was only fourteen when coerced into marriage with the future...


Advance Praise

“It was an honour to read Rain Dodging. It brought tears to the eyes and a renewed sense of how blessed I was with you and your cohorts all those years ago.”

—Professor Peter McCullough, Lincoln College, Oxford 


“Rain Dodging is a kaleidoscope of memoir and mystery, a collage of images and events. In a voice that’s candid, engaging, and thoroughly original, Godwin takes us on a journey through her life and into the 17th-century court of British Queen Mary of Modena. You’ll be hooked as you watch the connections unfold.”

—Shellie Michael, Professor of English, Volunteer State College


“Rain Dodging is a vision quest. I am typing through tears. I LOVED THE BOOK! I love her; what a character, free spirit, person I would like to hang with . . . ‘eternally curious about so much.’”

—Teresa Steve, social worker


“The opening chapters of Susan Godwin’s memoir whet the appetite for more. With vivid portrayals of Oxford’s Radcliffe Camera and Rare Book reading room, Susan brings her memories to life and powerfully conveys the excitement of scholarly discovery as she explores primary sources for late seventeenth-century English society, religion, culture, and the awkward assimilation of an intellectually accomplished Italian princess into the English royal family.”

—John M. Fyler, Professor of Medieval English at Tufts University

“It was an honour to read Rain Dodging. It brought tears to the eyes and a renewed sense of how blessed I was with you and your cohorts all those years ago.”

—Professor Peter McCullough, Lincoln...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781647425692
PRICE $17.95 (USD)
PAGES 312

Available on NetGalley

NetGalley Shelf App (PDF)
Send to Kindle (PDF)
Download (PDF)

Average rating from 8 members


Featured Reviews

This is a wonderfully absorbing and surprisingly entertaining account of Susan Godwin’s sojourn in Oxford and England to study the coterie of female writers at the court of Mary of Modena, James II’s Catholic wife in the English court of the seventeenth century. Godwin came to academia relatively late in life and her book makes numerous engaging autobiographical diversions into her very colourful past, which included distressing experiences of abuse. Coruscatingly candid and amusing, this is an unusual amalgam of intellectual history and confession.
Godwin’s delight in returning to Oxford and the frisson of pleasure that any scholar will feel on taking their seat at a favourite library, surrounded by volumes and desperate to unlock their secrets and treasures to understand and reveal the past - this certainly resonates with this reader and reviewer! She is an Anglophile and delights in the eccentricities and unconventionalities of life in England that the native inhabitant may occasionally find frustrating Nevertheless, there are some of rather fundamental historical inaccuracies – Godwin occasionally refers to James’s wife as Mary II, yet the spouse of a reigning monarch is never designated by their number; Mary II in fact was the joint monarch with William III of Orange. And there are errors in spelling of English places and terminology (Chippingham rather than Chippenham and the National Health System rather than Service, and the Berkshire town Slough is definitely not pronounced “Sluff”!) Still, this is a great read, a combination of academic research enthusiasm and autobiographical integrity.

Was this review helpful?

I loved this book!! I requested it because British royal family history is a hobby of mine. But this book is so much more! Interspersed throughout the author's research trip to Oxford is her own life story; which is incredible! I was amazed to read her connection to 1980s country music and fashion. Her antidotes contained names of artists I knew, at venues and events I recognized! Godwin is a talented writer and the book is interesting and well written. I would recommend Rain Dodging not only for the English connection but also as an engaging look at one woman's life and her connection to women throughout the centuries.

Was this review helpful?

I enjoyed this. A really creative account of the Stuart monarchy and also a parallel account of feminism through history. There is also an interesting personal arc weaving through the story. Fascinating.

Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: