|
|
|||
| title page Lucy’s Book A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack Smith’s Family Memoir |
![]() |
||||
|
Edited by Introduction by Signature Books / Salt Lake City |
|||||
| About the editor Lavina Fielding Anderson (Ph.D., English, University of Washington) lives in Salt Lake City with her husband Paul, a museum exhibit designer at Brigham Young University. They have one son. She is the editor of the Journal of Mormon History, co-editor of the Case Reports of the Mormon Alliance, current-issues editor of the Mormon Women’s Forum Quarterly, and production editor for the Review of Higher Education. She is a past president of the Association for Mormon Letters. She has been an associate editor of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought and of the Ensign magazine. Her books include (as editor) Chesterfield: Mormon Outpost in Idaho; (co-editor) Sisters in Spirit: Mormon Women in Historical and Cultural Perspective; Tending the Garden: Essays on Mormon Literature; (contributor) On Their Own: Widows and Widowhood in the American Southwest, 1848-1939; Religion, Feminism, and Freedom of Conscience: A Mormon/Humanist Dialogue; The Wilderness of Faith: Essays on Contemporary Mormon Thought; and Women and Authority: Re-emerging Mormon Feminism. She is a recipient of the Grace Fort Arrington Award for Distinguished Service from the Mormon History Association. |
|||||
| jacket flap “Am I indeed the mother of a prophet of the God of Heaven?” Lucy Mack Smith asks readers in the rough draft of her memoir. She answers in the affirmative. Yet her question conveys an intimacy that is absent from the polished, final version of her book. Dictated to a scribe, her spontaneity creates an ambiance that allows readers to picture her sitting in her rocking chair in Nauvoo, Illinois, reminiscing with a friend. This sense is heightened by her scribe’s phonetic rendering of frontier slang. For instance, Lucy worries about “the measels and other ketchin diseases,” rendered as “contagious disease” in the final version. She describes her son coming “upon a green sward under an apple tree,” saying that, “Here he lay down”flattened in the printed version, eliminating the word “sward.” Where Joseph’s brother says, “We must keep to work,” this becomes in the published edition, “We must not slacken our hands.” But literary issues aside, Lucy’s original narration carries significance due to what it says, and does not say, about Mormonism’s founding, in corroborating what other family members and early converts reported. For instance, she used the terms “dream” and “vision” interchangeably. She remembers that her son’s famous first vision occurred in his bedroom at night, echoing the well established tradition of her husband’s own prophetic dreams. The line dividing the physical and spiritual blurs further when Lucy tells that when her son retrieved the gold plates of the Book of Mormon, he was accosted three times by three different individuals, each of whom jumped up from behind a log, struck Joseph “a heavy blow” with a gun, and then allowed him to escape. The reader is left to wonder whether these were men or devils. Not that such distinctions between the supernatural and material world would have mattered to Lucy, who lived comfortably in both. A popular novelist in her day, von Goethe, described a young man spending a day in the country and sensing unseen spirits that held sway over his emotions, and proclaiming that “God in His Infinity bears us aloft in perpetual joy.” Lucy similarly felt that she was often “in the purview of angels,” and her heart “bounded at the thought.” Though “surrounded by enemies,” she was “yet in extacy [sic] of happiness”; and “truly,” she said, “my soul did magnify and my spirit rejoiced in God my savior.” Her ability to express the reality of this spiritual world and the intensity of her emotional responses make her, among a handful of eyewitnesses, one of the most compelling chroniclers of early Mormonism. Jacket design by Ron Stucki |
|||
|
copyright page Frontispiece photo courtesy Utah State Historical Society Lucy’s Book: A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack Smith’s Family Memoir was manufactured in the United States of America and was printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data 1. Smith, Joseph, 1805-1844. 2. Mormon ChurchHistory. 3. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SaintsPresidentsBiography. I. Anderson, Lavina Fielding. II. Bates, Irene M. III. Title. ISBN 1-56085-137-6 (cloth) |
|||
| Copyright © Signature Books, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this text or graphics may be reproduced in any form or by any means without written permission from Signature Books, LLC |