Sunday, April 19, 2026

BOOK REVIEW: Lidie: The Further Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton by Jane Smiley

I received this book for free from Netgalley. That did not influence this review.

Lidie: The Further Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton by Jane Smiley is a follow-up to the 1998 novel, The All-True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton. I don’t know why it took so long for book 2 to come out. Does anyone know?

Although I’ve read several of Jane Smiley’s books (my favorites being The Greenlanders and A Thousand Acres) I didn’t read the first Lidie book. Fortunately, it wasn’t necessary to have read that one first to understand or enjoy Lidie.

In pre-Civil War Illinois, Lidie Newton is an independent-minded woman thrown into dependence upon her sisters after the violent death of her husband in Kansas Territory. The novel weaves in the backstory, providing a good sense of what took place in book one. Lidie is mourning her husband and is still traumatized by the events in “Bloody Kansas.” She is a staunch abolitionist, but no one in her family wants to talk about that, which frustrates her.

Lidie is pulled from her grief by the antics of her niece, Annie, a grown woman who is still treated as a child and is laden with chores, but who is also independent-minded. She has a secret plan of escape. She wants to be an actress. While acting in a local holiday play, she attracts the attention of an Englishman who wants to be a producer back in England. Although this part seems a bit farfetched, this Englishman arranges for Annie and her chaperone, Lidie, to travel in luxury to Liverpool. He pays all their expenses. I kept waiting for something sinister to happen, but the guy is on the level. He takes them into his home where they meet his wife and daughter. Annie is an honored guest, while Lidie is seen as a servant, Annie’s maid.

In fact, Lidie likes being treated as a servant because it allows her a good deal more freedom. She gets along well (very well) with the other servants and also makes new acquaintances in Liverpool.

Her adventures here are fairly tame, as opposed to what reportedly took place in book one. But she does heal and she has the chance to re-evaluate what her next steps should be. The ending is a surprise, and seems a nice set-up for a book three.

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