Kerrison offers helpful insights into the intellectual life of southern women of the 18th century, as she shows what these women were reading, how their reading materials informed their perpectives of themselves and the world, and how they reconstructed or rejected the patriarchal ideals of their readings in their own writings. At times this book is a bit too information-dense, and I often had a hard time seeing Kerrigan's purpose for including so many examples and case studies. Still, I came to see the women Kerrigan writes about as if they were characters in a story, and I'd love to learn more about each of them if I can. Her connections between gender hierarchy and the institution of slavery are also fascinating, and I'd love to find out what other scholars have to say about these ideas. If anything, I learned that the act of writing can be an act of bravery for any woman, whether in the 18th century or in the 21st.