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How Sarah Kidd, the wife of a pirate captain, reinvented herself

Among English ballads exists a song about the 18th-century pirate Capt. William Kidd. Although not entirely factual, it describes a man who murdered another sailor before it concludes: “Take warning now by me, and shun bad company,” or else listeners might suffer the punishment that Kidd met at the end of a noose. 

But as history reveals, not everyone shunned Kidd’s charismatic company. Among his few, fast friends, there remained a courageous, resilient woman who was his anchor and the love of his life. “The Pirate’s Wife: The Remarkable True Story of Sarah Kidd” by Daphne Palmer Geanacopoulos gives a detailed view into the allure, mystery, and heartbreak that typified marriages to seamen, particularly at a time when the age of piracy was coming to an end. 

If you’re looking for a book about a swashbuckling femme fatale who wore breeches and fought alongside her lover, this is not that story. Rather, it’s a striking, thoroughly researched depiction of just how much persistence and inventiveness it took for a woman in Colonial America to retain security and dignity over the course of her life, when her place in society – as well as that of her seafaring husband – was repeatedly upended. 

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