Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

America's Founding Era reconsidered through the lives of two women as formidable as, and in some respects stronger than, the men they loved, married, and mothered.

Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler, born to wealth and privilege in New York's Hudson Valley during the latter half of the eighteenth century, were raised to make good marriages and supervise substantial households. Instead they became embroiled in the turmoil of America's insurrection against Great Britain-and rebelled themselves, in ways as different as each was from the other, against the destiny mapped out for them.

Glamorous Angelica, who sought fulfillment through attachments to powerful men, eloped at twenty with a war profiteer and led a luxurious life, first in Paris, then in London, charming Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and the Prince of Wales. Eliza, one year her junior, too candid for flirtation and uninterested in influence or intrigue, married a penniless illegitimate outsider, Alexander Hamilton, and devoted herself to his career. But after his appointment as America's first Treasury Secretary, she was challenged by the controversies in which he became involved, not the least of which was the attraction that grew between him and her adored sister.

When tragedy followed, everything changed for both women: one deprived of her animating spirit, the other improbably gaining a new, self-determined life. “You would not have suffered if you had married into a family less near the sun,” wrote Angelica to Eliza, “but then [you would have missed] the pride, the pleasure, the nameless satisfactions.”

Drawing on deep archival research, including never-published records and letters, Amanda Vaill interweaves this family drama with its historical context, creating a narrative with the sweep and intimacy of a nineteenth-century novel. Full of battles and dinner parties, murky politics and transparent frocks, fierce loyalty and betrayals both public and personal, Pride and Pleasure brings two extraordinary American heroines to life.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux

1147097199
Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

America's Founding Era reconsidered through the lives of two women as formidable as, and in some respects stronger than, the men they loved, married, and mothered.

Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler, born to wealth and privilege in New York's Hudson Valley during the latter half of the eighteenth century, were raised to make good marriages and supervise substantial households. Instead they became embroiled in the turmoil of America's insurrection against Great Britain-and rebelled themselves, in ways as different as each was from the other, against the destiny mapped out for them.

Glamorous Angelica, who sought fulfillment through attachments to powerful men, eloped at twenty with a war profiteer and led a luxurious life, first in Paris, then in London, charming Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and the Prince of Wales. Eliza, one year her junior, too candid for flirtation and uninterested in influence or intrigue, married a penniless illegitimate outsider, Alexander Hamilton, and devoted herself to his career. But after his appointment as America's first Treasury Secretary, she was challenged by the controversies in which he became involved, not the least of which was the attraction that grew between him and her adored sister.

When tragedy followed, everything changed for both women: one deprived of her animating spirit, the other improbably gaining a new, self-determined life. “You would not have suffered if you had married into a family less near the sun,” wrote Angelica to Eliza, “but then [you would have missed] the pride, the pleasure, the nameless satisfactions.”

Drawing on deep archival research, including never-published records and letters, Amanda Vaill interweaves this family drama with its historical context, creating a narrative with the sweep and intimacy of a nineteenth-century novel. Full of battles and dinner parties, murky politics and transparent frocks, fierce loyalty and betrayals both public and personal, Pride and Pleasure brings two extraordinary American heroines to life.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

by Amanda Vaill

Narrated by Michael David Axtell, Sarah Borges

Unabridged

Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

by Amanda Vaill

Narrated by Michael David Axtell, Sarah Borges

Unabridged

Audiobook (Digital)

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on October 21, 2025

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Overview

America's Founding Era reconsidered through the lives of two women as formidable as, and in some respects stronger than, the men they loved, married, and mothered.

Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler, born to wealth and privilege in New York's Hudson Valley during the latter half of the eighteenth century, were raised to make good marriages and supervise substantial households. Instead they became embroiled in the turmoil of America's insurrection against Great Britain-and rebelled themselves, in ways as different as each was from the other, against the destiny mapped out for them.

Glamorous Angelica, who sought fulfillment through attachments to powerful men, eloped at twenty with a war profiteer and led a luxurious life, first in Paris, then in London, charming Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and the Prince of Wales. Eliza, one year her junior, too candid for flirtation and uninterested in influence or intrigue, married a penniless illegitimate outsider, Alexander Hamilton, and devoted herself to his career. But after his appointment as America's first Treasury Secretary, she was challenged by the controversies in which he became involved, not the least of which was the attraction that grew between him and her adored sister.

When tragedy followed, everything changed for both women: one deprived of her animating spirit, the other improbably gaining a new, self-determined life. “You would not have suffered if you had married into a family less near the sun,” wrote Angelica to Eliza, “but then [you would have missed] the pride, the pleasure, the nameless satisfactions.”

Drawing on deep archival research, including never-published records and letters, Amanda Vaill interweaves this family drama with its historical context, creating a narrative with the sweep and intimacy of a nineteenth-century novel. Full of battles and dinner parties, murky politics and transparent frocks, fierce loyalty and betrayals both public and personal, Pride and Pleasure brings two extraordinary American heroines to life.

A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"In this in-depth look at the public and private lives of Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler (and . . . Peggy?), one of our great biographers takes the sisters out of Hamilton’s supporting cast and puts them front and center. Here, we see how two formidable characters who came from the same heavyweight New York family learned to wield their power and influence in very different ways that would impact their country for generations to come." —Town and Country

“[A] luxuriant dual biography . . . Vaill’s richly textured portrait [is] an elegant and entertaining account of the surprisingly modern lives of founding women.” —Publishers Weekly

"An engaging blend of perceptive biography and vivid narrative history." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“Amanda Vaill has crafted an epic biography of America’s Revolutionary Age—truly a Tolstoyan accomplishment, a sweeping narrative filled with love affairs, political intrigue and battlefield drama. The vibrant Schuyler sisters were not only feminist witnesses, but astute actors in the American Revolution. Vaill’s work is a piece of revelatory biography at its best, deeply researched and wonderfully told." —Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer and Director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography in New York City

"The Schuylers have their ideal biographer in Amanda Vaill, whose captivating, rich story reveals the revolutionary strength of women adroitly using their influence to shape and preserve the very history that later excluded them. This meticulously researched, beautifully written book brings these amazing women back to life with the fiery drama and brilliant insight they deserve – the full story behind the fascinating women in “Hamilton.” —Carla Kaplan, author of Troublemaker: The Fierce, Unruly Life of Jessica Mitford and Miss Anne in Harlem: The White Women of the Black Renaissance

Pride and Pleasure is a marvel. Amanda Vaill has transmuted a prodigious amount of archival research into a brisk narrative that is both erudite and entertaining. Telling the stories of 18th- and 19th-century women—even those who were married to famous men—poses special challenges for the biographer, and Vaill has faced these challenges with style and ingenuity. The Schuyler sisters come alive in these pages, and they are delightful, instructive, dazzling company.” —Victoria Johnson, Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award Finalist for American Eden

“In a triumph of vivid storytelling built on excavation of myriad never seen sources, Amanda Vaill resurrects and restores two women at the center of our democracy’s founding. Pride and Pleasure, is edge-of-your-seat novelistic, the story of the extraordinary and intertwining lives of Eliza Schuyler Hamilton and Angelica Schuyler Church, until now known as the two brilliant sisters who both loved Alexander Hamilton. As I read the final pages, I was as rejuvenated by the original dreams for our country as I was moved by Eliza Hamilton in her nineties, walking the streets of the new capital, in view of the monument to her old friend George Washington under construction. —Honor Moore, author of Our Revolution: A Mother and Daughter at Midcentury

“A tremendous feat of induction, managing as it does to tell most of the history of the Revolution and early republic through the lives of Eliza Hamilton and Angelica Church, two sisters within the endlessly fertile and politically busy Schuyler family of upstate New York. Written with grace and authority, Pride and Pleasure depicts a vast range of consequential conduct, private and public, and it always puts the reader right “in the room where it happens.” —Thomas Mallon, author of Fellow Travelers and Henry and Clara

“Amanda Vaill has given the Schuyler sisters their long-overdue retrieval from the footnote pages of Alexander Hamilton's story. Here, they are formidable women navigating love, loss, power, and purpose in revolutionary America, not simply witnesses to history, but the makers and shapers of it, too. This is biography as it should be—unsparing, elegant, and utterly enthralling.”
—Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire and A World on Fire

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2025-05-15
The American Revolution and its aftermath as experienced by the siblings made famous inHamilton.

The many people who saw Lin-Manuel Miranda’s mega-popular musical may be surprised to learn in this atmospheric account that, far from introducing Alexander Hamilton to her sister Eliza, Angelica Schuyler first met him at their wedding and that she herself was married. Brother- and sister-in-law did indeed develop a flirtatious, increasingly intense relationship, and Vail drops one tantalizing hint that it may have turned physical, but she also leaves no doubt that Hamilton’s primary devotion was always to Eliza, portrayed here as a smart, blunt woman with more integrity than her glamorous older sister (whom the author doesn’t seem to much like). Vail pays equally shrewd attention to character and circumstances as she traces the lives of Philip and Catharine Schuyler’s two eldest daughters through the birth of the United States and the decades that followed. Other siblings and relatives also take turns in a crowded but highly readable text stuffed with delightfully gossipy character sketches (“stout, party-loving Henry Knox, and his equally substantial and jolly wife, Lucy”) and savory descriptions of clothing and food. Hamilton comes across as ambitious and driven, greatly needing the support of his calmer, more sensible wife. The financial wheelings and dealings of Angelica’s husband, John Church, offer a case study in the wide-open nature of the late colonial and post-independence American economy, which Hamilton sought to strengthen in measures highly unpopular with his state-rights-oriented opponents. His death in a duel with Aaron Burr left Eliza with crippling debts, and the book’s final 100-plus pages, which chronicle her 50 years as a widow, show a tough, resourceful woman determined to provide for her children and honor her husband’s memory. Meanwhile, Angelica’s husband goes bankrupt, and the sisters come to realize that the privileged world they grew up in is gone.

An engaging blend of perceptive biography and vivid narrative history.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940194525140
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 10/21/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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