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Hick: The Trailblazing Journalist Who Captured Eleanor Roosevelt's Heart

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In this riveting YA non-fiction set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, trace Lorena Hickok--or Hick's-- rise from devastating childhood to renowned journalist, and watch as she forms the most significant friendship and romantic relationship of her life with first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt.

Lorena Hickok came from nothing. She was on her own from the age of 14, cooking and scrubbing for one family after another as she struggled to finish school. But the girl who secretly longed for affection discovered she had a talent with words.

That talent allowed Hick to carve out a place for herself in the male-dominated newsrooms of the Midwest where she earned bylines on everything from football to opera to politics. By age 35 she’d become one of the Associated Press’s top reporters.

At the moment her career was taking off, Hick was assigned to cover Eleanor Roosevelt during FDR’s presidential campaign. By the close of 1932, Hick was head over heels in love with the wife of the president-elect. And her life would never be the same.

Acclaimed author Sarah Miller read the 3500 letters that exist between Lorena Hickock and Eleanor Roosevelt to reconstruct their friendship and love, and bring Hick's story to a new generation.

384 pages, Hardcover

Published May 27, 2025

41 people are currently reading
474 people want to read

About the author

Sarah Miller

10 books862 followers
Sarah Miller began writing her first novel at the age of ten, and has spent the last two decades working in libraries and bookstores. She is the author of two previous historical novels, Miss Spitfire: Reaching Helen Keller, and The Lost Crown. Her nonfiction debut, The Borden Murders: Lizzie Borden and the Trial of the Century, was hailed by the New York Times as "a historical version of Law & Order." She lives in Michigan.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 40 reviews
Profile Image for Julie.
845 reviews21 followers
October 27, 2025
What an interesting book about Eleanor Roosevelt and the female journalist, known as Hick who became enamored with Eleanor. Hick corresponded back and forth with her through 3,500 letters along with meeting Eleanor on occasion. Highly recommended! Biography
Profile Image for Kate  Long.
387 reviews19 followers
June 18, 2025
Stars: 5 Stars
Format: Print
Series: Stand Alone
Steam Level: Not Steamy

CWs: physical abuse, speculated SA, sexism, homophobia

I read this for the 2025 Sapphic Book Bingo reading challenge for the prompt Free Choice.

Wow. I honestly can’t remember the last time that I got so attached to the person I’m reading about while knowing full well that they have passed. It’s usually only fictional works that affect me so deeply. This is a special book.

Quick Thoughts:
- I knew a little bit about these two being a couple but not nearly as much as described in this book or really much of anything about Hick so this was just fascinating
- This book is perfect for when you don’t have long amounts of time to read. The chapters are very short and were easy to read in random five minute increments I had
- I was greatly amused when I learned that Aberdeen, North Dakota payed a big part of Hick’s childhood. My wife’s family is from there (and are still there) and it’s such a small place that I joke that “we fly into Aberdeen Airport Fish and Tackle where the Fish and Tackle section is bigger than the airport” and assume no one but people from Aberdeen know of it
- It’s always so interesting to see the little “nothing” events in a person’s life that were actually pivotal to how their life played out
- Reading about all the turmoil (like constantly being hounded by the public) these two had to contend with to stay together drove home the point on how deeply they cared about each other
- As someone in a very long term relationship, I sincerely appreciated that the author didn’t ignore the tiffs that Elenor and Hick got into, and showed how these things didn’t lessen the deep connection between them and were just them being two very different people in a relationship together
- Hick was very savvy to send her papers and letter to the FDR Presidential Library with the stipulation that the crates couldn’t be opened until ten years after her death. Without a doubt those documents would have been altered (hello Emily Dickinson) or destroyed without having that official protection of a presidential library
- Of course I knew how this book was going to end but I still cried through most of that last part. So much of their lives and feelings were documented that even with great swaths of it lost, I became unexpectedly very attached to both of them
- I really recommend reading all the way through the Author’s Note at the end. It gave me a greater appreciation of all the work that went into this book and how carefully Sarah Miller pulled the information together without wildly speculating about things
- Even if most of the information is already known by whoever reads this, it is worth reading if only to see a couple’s relationship can be so very different from how media/society says how it should look like and it work perfectly for them, letting them thrive as a couple

Overall this book was fascinating and so well done that I sincerely hope many, many people read this book. It will be sticking to me for a long, long time.
Profile Image for Ellie G.
338 reviews2 followers
June 29, 2025
A really remarkable biography. Miller does the work of unburying--in an insightful, engaging, very sensitive manner--a forgotten corner of America's queer history. I hope future generations learn about Lorena Hickock and her contributions to journalism, progressive politics, and the New Deal before I did.
Profile Image for Shawn.
97 reviews
August 29, 2025
At times Miller's writing is charged with journalistic energy and other times her tone is soft, reflective - reverent. Reading writing this good makes me aware of how hard it is to write at this level.

Gorgeous jacket design.

The best book I've read all year.
Profile Image for Ashana Torani.
80 reviews1 follower
July 18, 2025
Very compelling read! Was interesting to learn about Hick’s life and the way her love story was portrayed with Eleanor as well as the other women in her life was really beautiful
Profile Image for Madeline.
110 reviews9 followers
March 5, 2025
This biography of Lorena Hickok was incredibly interesting from start to finish. What a life she had! Born in Wisconsin, she was the oldest--and in her opinion, least pretty--of three girls who had an incredibly abusive, volatile father. After her mother died, Lorena moved out and supported herself as a young teenager. She found work as a domestic worker in others' homes, finished high school in Michigan, and eventually attended Lawrence University in Wisconsin. Before finishing her degree, she left to devote her time to her job at the Milwaukee Sentinel and then Minneapolis Tribune.

Lorena, who began going by "Hick," had an engaging writing style and began to excel in her field despite being a woman. She later moved to New York and worked for the Associated Press. She met Eleanor Roosevelt in the 1930s, as FDR was running for President, and the two women hit it off. They developed a close friendship that clearly, based on the thousands of surviving letters they sent one another, became love. When Hick's reporting of Eleanor became ethically questionable due to their relationship, she quit the newspaper business and began traveling the country to interview people affected by the Great Depression. Though they couldn't spend as much time together as they'd have liked, she and Eleanor remained close friends for the rest of Eleanor's life.

This is a well-researched and engaging account of a very impressive and unusual woman. In the author's note, Sarah Miller notes that she read all of the surviving correspondence between Eleanor and Hick (among other things, of course) as part of her research. Her respect for her subject really shows in her writing.
366 reviews1 follower
July 9, 2025
I had never heard of Lorena Hickok but I knew some things about Eleanor Roosevelt and thought it might be interesting to find out about this woman called "Hick." I was amazed how the first two chapters drew me in because I related so much with Lorena. It helped me to put a descriptive feeling to some things in my life that I had not really known how to express before. It shook me. I continued to read and found Hick to be a very interesting woman. She was someone who was able to make her way as a single woman in the workforce at a time when a woman was expected to marry, stay at home and take care of their husband, children. Due to her childhood years Hick never knew or believed how smart, intelligent and caring others thought her to be. Going from a basic copy girl to an Associated Press reporter assigned to Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife, Eleanor and then to extend her coverage to Mrs. Roosevelt as she was transitioning to the First Lady of the United States was not easy. Hick's loyalty to the Roosevelts and her friends was admirable. She had to battle the gossip of the elite and some co-workers who thought she only got her positions in work because of who she knew. The strength she found in the long-lasting friendship and close relationship with Eleanor Roosevelt lends insight into the Roosevelt family and politics during this time in history. In my view, this book is a winner.
Profile Image for Amanda Clay.
Author 4 books24 followers
November 13, 2024
This book is fantastic. Sarah Miller is such a good biographer, the entire story flows organically, the source material is so well integrated it seems like natural dialogue. The picture she paints of Hick, and of Hick and Eleanor, and of Eleanor herself is real and well-rounded. Fun anecdotes, fascinating side-characters, and a comprehensive look at Hicks dogs and cars brings the subject to life.


My one complaint is about the writing. Throughout the book, Hick, Eleanor, and the lesbians who were part of their circle of friends are referred to as 'queer' rather than as lesbian, which is jarring as well as insulting/ridiculous. There are at least three quotes from the women where they use the word 'queer' to describe things that are strange, out of place, unusual. There is no way they would have defined themselves as queer and it's presumptuous to stick the label on them, especially when the word Lesbian exists and is accurate.

Similarly, we are told of Hick's pioneering achievements in the world of journalism, making jobs and advances where no other women had gone before. Unfortunately, the book consistently refers to Lorena Hickock as achieving all kinds of firsts for her 'gender' rather than her sex, which would be accurate.

Nonetheless, this is a fantastic book.
Profile Image for Shazza Maddog.
1,363 reviews2 followers
June 23, 2025
Lorena Hickok (eventually going by the name "Hick") grew up in an abusive fa

mily. As the eldest daughter, she was treated badly by her father and ignored by her mother. After her mother died, her father sent her off to live with a cousin who paid her to take care of their kids and their house - just one of many jobs Hick held. After she finally escaped this hellish life, Hick moved on, eventually completing high school and being part of the literary club and the yearbook before deciding to become a reporter.

Here, once Hick got a job and could actually prove herself more in tune with the big stories (those given to male reporters) than the "women's pages" and is eventually assigned to do a report on Eleanor Roosevelt, where she becomes fascinated. The fascination becomes mutual and the pair carry on a loving relationship for the rest of Eleanor's life.

A very interesting biography and history book. There was a lot I didn't know about Eleanor presented and that was intriguing. Hick sounds like someone my great aunt would've admired greatly (her Mom was either the first woman postmaster in Indiana or the U.S., not sure which, and my great aunt had some amazing adventures).
Profile Image for Xanthe.
1,073 reviews58 followers
December 29, 2025
Even without the trumpeted connection to Eleanor Roosevelt, this biography of journalist Lorena Hickok is a compelling and fascinating look at the life of a woman who climbed her way out of a tough childhood and made a career for herself at a time when everything was stacked against her. Just to get to know Hick and the amazing life that she had makes very glad that I read this book and learned about what it took to go from drudgery and a horrible family, to making a journalism career in a time where women were rejected and minimized as being able to report news and work with men. After reading this book, I now just really would like to read Hick's columns and more of her writing. The book does an excellent job of giving excerpts and reactions to what she wrote, but I'd love to read more. And of course there's the Eleanor Roosevelt of it all. The author does a good job of highlighting the differences in personality between the two women and how their lives kept them apart, but also makes it clear how true and vital their love was for them. So lovely and moving. I'm very glad I read this one.
Profile Image for Melissa.
2,724 reviews40 followers
July 27, 2025
Lorena Hickok was notable in her own right. Born in 1893, when few women forged their destiny, she overcame intense poverty, neglect, and abuse, earning a reputation as a top reporter, who could handle any story. But it is the revelation of her long, romantic relationship with Eleanor Roosevelt that makes her biography uniquely compelling. Miller’s scrupulous research gives readers a remarkable look at a passionate, lifelong affair, intimate glimpses of our most consequential first lady, and a nuanced portrayal of how a romantic relationship with a world historical figure can complicate a life, especially a reporter’s. Four sections divide Hick’s life into childhood, adulthood, with Eleanor, and after Eleanor. Sixteen pages of photographs divide the book. The exhaustive level of detail occasionally drags, but ultimately adds up to an astonishing account of a life, career, and love that followed no template. Back matter includes language note, author’s note, sources, and endnotes. Main characters are white. Review based on an ARC. Published copy consulted.
Profile Image for Hannah Jane.
813 reviews27 followers
September 13, 2025
When I added this book to my to-read list, I thought much of it would revolve around Hick and Eleanor’s relationship. It absolutely does, but there’s so much more. It’s a biography of an extraordinary woman who encountered one barrier after another. Each barrier Hick came across, she either said the hell with it if it wasn’t worth it or knocked the barrier down, sometimes paving the way for others. The one barrier she couldn’t overcome was having Eleanor to herself. Though there were moments when Eleanor and Hick could be together, those moments grew less and less as Eleanor became busier with her first lady roles.

This is a tough book to put down. First, after Hick's father and stepmother left her to take care of herself in her teens, Hick battled many obstacles to make a living and attend school. Next, she fought nonstop for newspaper assignments that were always, up to that point, given to men. Hick fought to spend time with Eleanor, and Hick battled her own insecurities until the very end. There’s a lot of heartbreak, anger, and injustice mucking up the pages, but Hick’s wit, resilience, determination, and boundless love for Eleanor shines through.
Profile Image for Ms. Yingling.
3,953 reviews608 followers
November 17, 2024
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus

This was really interesting, especially since my grandmother was also born in 1893. Young readers would be flabbergasted to see how Ms. Hickok had to fend for herself from a young age, and I was amazed at how she was able to become educated and get work as a journalist at a time when this was a very hard thing for women to do. I know the point of this book was to highlight her relationship with Eleanor Roosevelt, but to me, the most interesting part was learning about her career.

I love Miller's work, and this is very well researched, but I'm probably not going to buy it for my middle school library. I did buy Miller's titles about the Romanovs and about the Dionne Quintuplets because they were fascinating, but my students now rarely pick up nonfiction if it is over 200 pages. Fans of women's history will want to take a look at this great title.
Profile Image for Chrissy.
904 reviews16 followers
June 23, 2025
Hick is a fascinating character. From her unhappy childhood to her tenacious work as a journalist, her story kept me reading. I knew nothing of her amazing relationship with Eleanor Roosevelt, and the author did a good job of depicting a caring relationship that, out of necessity, changed over the years, but remained affectionate. Hick's story seemed to take a back seat to Eleanor's in the back half of the book. I can see that it would have to, as Mrs. Roosevelt's schedule also took precedent over Hick's needs, but I feel like the book focused a bit too much on the first lady. Hicks jobs during the depression and afterward are just as interesting as her journalism early in her career. Still, this is a graceful depiction of an important relationship that had to remain hidden at the time, and should be better known now.
Profile Image for Jennybeast.
4,347 reviews17 followers
July 22, 2025
This is a spectacular book -- riveting to read, well researched and just beautifully presented. Respectful of their relationship and of not making assumptions. Clear in communicating the deep love and affection between Hick and Eleanor, and also clear in presenting a history that isn't based on a monogamous heterosexual relationship. I also just love to read about Hick as a person -- her younger years were unimaginable in hardship, and yet not unusual, I think. Her strong and thoughtful personality shines through her words, and it's just amazing to read about her as a trailblazer in her own right. It's also, not gonna lie, a comfort to read about the FDR administration, and about people who care passionately about the welfare of others.
Profile Image for Jan Raspen.
1,005 reviews16 followers
July 15, 2025
I chose this biography because it is brand new and received a bunch of starred reviews. I'm just not sure that a YA audience will appreciate it. It is quite long (over 11 hours on my Kindle, although a bunch of that was the footnotes and index), and just not all that interesting. We do learn about Eleanor and Lorena's lives, but there was so little of the actual text of their correspondence that I felt like we really didn't get a lot of insight into their relationship.
I don't think this is a necessary purchase for HS libraries.
Profile Image for Francesca.
120 reviews
August 26, 2025
I'm a fan of narrative nonfiction so I'm always down for a good story about someone I know nothing about. This is a well researched book that carries a thoughtful and thought provoking narrative that's more about behind the scenes than the public figures and decisions we know so well. It was also fascinating to take a peek into a corner of queer history and try to understand what it was like to love so deeply and yet behind closed doors.
Profile Image for Emily Cissell.
76 reviews
November 17, 2025
While I generally enjoyed this book there were times it felt incredibly repetitive. This isn't really the fault of the author as Hick tended to do a lot of complaining in her letters to Eleanor, but it does make for a slightly more boring book where maybe a couple of things could have been cut. As for my library I plan on purchasing a copy, but I do believe this will be a hard sell especially due to how long the book is.
Profile Image for katie .
38 reviews
December 1, 2025
Awesome! I love the voice of this narrator, and I love Hick! What a compassionate — sometimes funny, sometimes tragic — biography.
This is going on my shelf. It’s “easy” to read: paced briskly despite the 300+ page length. Also, I appreciate that it’s not lesbian representation for the sake of representation alone. Hick is painted in such a likable, nuanced way that I think anyone could empathize with, or relate to, her.
Profile Image for Marg.
60 reviews
June 2, 2025
Very well researched and written book. Knew nothing about Lorena before reading this, and I’m so grateful to the author for delving into the story. The amount of times that Lorena got fired at the beginning of this book and then would get back up again and get a new job was honestly inspiring. Really enjoyed it!
Profile Image for Molly Burdick.
21 reviews5 followers
July 18, 2025
This is a biography/nonfiction but it reads like historical fiction (in a good way). The author paints such a complete picture of Hick and Eleanor as humans, and I love the way the narrative dips into quotations in the first person. I rarely read nonfiction, and when I do, it doesn’t make me cry, but this sure did.
Profile Image for Lauren Stoolfire.
4,781 reviews297 followers
August 11, 2025
Hick: The Trailblazing Journalist Who Captured Eleanor Roosevelt's Heart by Sarah Miller is an outstanding YA biography that I highly recommend checking it out. If you're at all interested in Lorena Hickock, Eleanor Roosevelt, trailblazing women from history, and LGBT+ history, you can't skip it. I'll have to read up more on this fascinating woman and her work.
Profile Image for Amanda Shepard (Between-the-Shelves).
2,371 reviews45 followers
October 30, 2025
Definitely well researched, about a person that I didn't know anything about! This would be great to have in nonfiction collections, especially for teens that might be interested in this period of history. It's also written in a way that is accessible to teens, and though the topic might not have wide appeal, I'm sure there are some that would pick this one up.
5 reviews
December 23, 2025
This was a pretty good book. It gave an insight into the lives of both women, and at the same time, it went more than just a factual biography. This book showed the emotions, sensitivities, and thoughts of the characters involved. I was pretty impressed with how the reader could easily see the struggles facing Mrs. Roosevelt and Miss Hickcock. The author did a great job!
2,407 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2025
Clearly meticulously researched and detailed. This was very much about Hick instead of Eleanor Roosevelt, and bits and pieces were missing because of the nature of the primary sources--a fact I think I would have liked to see addressed more in the book too.
61 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2025
Very interesting story of Eleanor’s relationship/friendship with her press secretary, Lorena Hickok, “Hick.” I’d love to see the original letters in the Roosevelt library. I’m not sure that this is a Young Adult book?
Profile Image for Mark Menard.
191 reviews2 followers
July 11, 2025
An incredible read! Sarah Miller has a writing style that draws you in and keeps you there. I so thoroughly enjoyed Hick’s life story. It was told in a way that made you feel all kinds of emotions. I absolutely loved it. Highly Recommend.
Profile Image for Kim.
1,607 reviews36 followers
September 14, 2025
A well-researched and fascinating exploration of the little-known relationship between Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena Hickok— or Hick.
It can read a little dry since all dialogue is taken directly from letters and interviews, but it will hold interest for teens and adults.
Profile Image for acacia.
1 review1 follower
November 13, 2025
Really enjoyed this biography; the author takes a detailed look at the source material and stays true to it while crafting a compelling narrative. Listened to the audiobook which was fab for a long drive
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