Dolley Madison is one of my favorite historical figures, mostly because of Catherine Allgor's marvelous biography of her, so I was very excited to stumble across this novel. It contains neither lesbians nor mystery-solving cats, alas, as Rita Mae Brown's other work let me hope (seriously, how cool would that be?), but it was a solid historical novel. For me, it got a tad bogged down in the congressional dramas of the era, but I liked how Brown gestures to themes and issues that loomed large in Dolley's later life (money troubles, her rascally son, etc.). My biggest historical qualm was with how Dolley's attitudes towards slavery were represented - I think Brown, in her desire to make an admirable heroine for modern readers, made Dolley more anti-slavery than she was. Sure, she had been raised a Quaker, but she also sold off slaves after James' death, against his express wishes, and resisted selling Paul Jennings his freedom. I think a more honest accounting of Dolley's relationship with slavery would have made her a more complex and historically honest character. But overall, still an enjoyable read.