After the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the nation demanded silence from its grieving First Lady. When she refused, America judged her.
In The Verdict of Men, bestselling author Sidney St. James delivers a searing work of creative historical nonfiction that dares to confront one of the most overlooked injustices in American History: the confinement and silencing of Mary Todd Lincoln after her husband's death.
This is not the story America has told itself.
Behind closed doors and polite language, Mary Todd Lincoln was declared unstable—not by a jury of peers, but by men who found her grief inconvenient, her memory dangerous, and her refusal to disappear unacceptable. She was confined without charge. Examined without consent. Pressured into silence for the comfort of institutions more concerned with reputation than justice.
Through meticulously researched events and powerfully imagined interior truths, The Verdict of Men exposes how a male-dominated legal and medical system confused grief with guilt—and control with care. In parallel, the novel revisits the execution of Mary Surratt, asking whether America repeated the same injustice twice, simply refining its methods.
This is a story about power disguised as protection.
About silence demanded as dignity.
About a woman who refused to be erased.
Unflinching, intimate, and morally urgent, The Verdict of Men is not a tale of madness—it is a reckoning. A novel that challenges readers to ask not whether Mary Todd Lincoln was unstable, but whether the nation that judged her was willing to listen.
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