


Books in series

Cecil Dreeme
1861

Make Art Not War
Political Protest Posters from the Twentieth Century
2016

Gilded Suffragists
The New York Socialites who Fought for Women's Right to Vote
2017

What Would Mrs. Astor Do?
The Essential Guide to the Manners and Mores of the Gilded Age
2018

Parkchester
A Bronx Tale of Race and Ethnicity
2019

The House on Henry Street
The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement
2020

The Truth about Baked Beans
An Edible History of New England
2020

42 Today
Jackie Robinson and His Legacy
2021

Growing Up Bank Street
A Greenwich Village Memoir
2021

Gilded Age Cocktails
History, Lore, and Recipes from America's Golden Age
2021

Jazz Age Cocktails
History, Lore, and Recipes from America's Roaring Twenties
2021
Authors

Johanna Neuman's latest book, And Yet They Persisted: How American Women Won the Right to Vote, tells the story of how women fought for two centuries—from the revolutionary war to the civil rights era—for the vote. As the nation celebrates the centennial of the 19th Amendment, this book reminds us that the abiding attribute needed for social change is persistence. An earlier book, Gilded Suffragists, tells the story more than 200 women of enormous wealth who joined the fight to win women the right to vote. With names like Astor, Belmont and Vanderbilt, they were the media darlings of their day, covered for every excess of fashion and decor. And when they risked their social standing to win the vote for women, it was like Oprah Winfrey blessing a cause today. It popularized the movement. An award-winning journalist with 30 years of experience in Washington, D.C. covering the news for major national newspapers, Johanna recently earned a PhD in history at American University. She is already at work on her second history book, a look at the fight between militants and moderates during the suffrage struggle.

Jeffrey S. Gurock is Libby M. Klaperman Professor of Jewish History at Yeshiva University. He has written over a dozen books in the field of American Jewish history and also served as associate editor to American Jewish History, the most important journal in that field, from 1982 to 2002. His work focuses on the American Orthodox community and the variations in Orthodox practice and ritual over the course of American Jewish history. His books include Orthodox Jews in America (Indiana University Press, 2009), a comprehensive social and cultural history of this group and its relations to other Jews and mainstream American society, and Jews in Gotham (New York University Press, 2012), which chronicles New York Jewry from 1920 to 2010. For its 135th annual gala in 2015, CCNY honored Dr. Gurock as one of its distinguished alumni.