Emily Franklin is the author of more than twenty novels and a poetry collection, Tell Me How You Got Here. Her award-winning work has appeared in the New York Times, Boston Globe, Guernica, JAMA, and numerous literary magazines as well as featured and read aloud on NPR and named notable by the Association of Jewish Libraries. A lifelong visitor to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, she lives outside of Boston with her family including two dogs large enough to be lions.
"Praise for The Lioness of Boston ""Gorgeous writing enhances this absorbing portrait of a fascinating woman ahead of her time."" --Toronto Star ""The life story of Isabella Stewart Gardner, from her marriage in 1861 to Jack Gardner, a member of Boston's 'High Society, ' through her death in 1924....Franklin's lyrical, erudite style befits Belle and grabs readers' attention."" --Library Journal, starred review ""...a rich, nuanced portrait of a woman hungry to find beauty, knowledge, and her own place in the world."" --Shelf Awareness ""Extraordinary....Vividly written in beautiful prose."" --Provincetown Magazine ""We never miss a chance to visit the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum when we're in Boston, so it should come as no surprise that we can't wait to dive into Emily Franklin's new novel, based on the life and times of the aristocratic rebel. The Lioness of Boston looks at how the city's reigning society tried to ice Gardner out, but failed when she found that following her own vision--and aligning herself with likeminded rulebreakers--was more important than meeting the standards of brittle Brahmins. And whose name do we all remember now?"" --Town & Country, ""A Must-Read Book of Spring 2023"" ""A vivid narrative...brims with pitch-perfect period details...cannily captures Isabella Stewart Gardner's ambition, independence, and quirks. Fans of strong female protagonists and Gilded Age historicals will enjoy this."" --Publishers Weekly ""The Lioness of Boston is a captivating story of a significant woman in Boston's history who left that city a cultural legacy to last the ages. This beautiful novel will appeal to those who love masterful historical fiction, literary fiction, and stories of triumphant women who leave an indelible mark."" --New York Journal of Books ""Emily Franklin takes us into the very heart and soul of Isabella Stewart Gardner in her engaging historical fiction novel....In Franklin's writing, Gardner is headstrong, sensitive, and in a sense -- given the blue-blooded circles in which she tried to live -- cursed with a curious mind and a desperate desire to make a mark on the world. Of course, we know that Gardner does eventually do so, with the opening in 1903 of an Italian palazzo-style home as a museum to showcase her impressive collection of old masters, antiques, and objets d'art. But with a novelist's freedom, Franklin builds the story of how this stunning art institution came to be by jumping off Gardner's real-life tragedies, remarkable relationships with people of note, and extensive foreign travels, which provide solace to her troubled soul."" --Martha's Vineyard Times ""Franklin's gorgeous, extraordinarily intimate and timely novel about Isabella Stewart Gardner showcases the life of a daring, brilliant woman who refused to be confined by the mores of her day, even as she searched for her truest self. So richly alive, I was running to Google to reacquaint myself with every mentioned painting, so moving, I wept over the tragedies and delighted in her bold success. How could any reader not be inspired by the cast of creatives including Oscar Wilde, Henry James, John Singer Sargent, and more? This book is just shatteringly good, with writing so artful, Isabella herself would surely approve."" --Caroline Leavitt, author of Pictures of You ""An engaging portrait of a bold yet vulnerable woman....A perennial tale of a woman fighting for her place in a man's world."" --Kirkus ""This beautiful, sensitively written novel explores the fascinating life of Isabella Stewart Gardner--feminist before feminism, celebrity before celebrity. Captivating and evocative, The Lioness of Boston transported me to America's Golden Age. I couldn't put it down."" --Jessica Shattuck, author of The Women in the Castle ""The Lioness of Boston shows the deft touch of Edith Wharton and the delightful pomp of The Gilded Age--it's a book both elegant and entertaining, one to savor line by line even as it carries us forward on the spirit and audacity of the narrator. Emily Franklin has rendered Isabella Stewart Gardner a classic literary heroine, one who emerges from heartbreak and defiance to shape her own life and the culture of an entire city."" --Timothy Schaffert, author of The Perfume Thief ""A novel of blazing insight, The Lioness of Boston captures the daring life and mind of the unforgettable woman who transformed American art and the city of Boston itself. This masterfully written work of historical fiction will remind some of Lily King's Euphoria and others of Melanie Benjamin's The Swans of Fifth Avenue. The Lioness of Boston is the best kind of novel--at once a deft page-turner and a thrilling love story about a woman's passion for an independent life--that will sear your mind, break your heart, and leave you forever changed."" --Dawn Tripp, author of Georgia: A Novel ""The Lioness of Boston is a treasure trove of art, sensuality, Boston history, and more. Emily Franklin has captured Isabella Stewart Gardner's blazing life and the light it sheds on the lives of women then and now."" --Rachel Kadish, author of The Weight of Ink"