'Wives, Widows, Mistresses, and Nuns in Early Modern Italy is a strong collection of essays that will illuminate early modern women in a thoughtful and provocative manner.' Jacqueline Marie Musacchio, Wellesley College, USA and author of Art, Marriage, and Family in the Florentine Renaissance Palace
'The volume is beautifully presented, with fifty-seven black and white illustrations, and a substantial bibliography that provides a good overview of the field... McIvers volume contributes to the recent scholarly shift of attention away from traditional patronage systems more commonly associated with male elites... This collection of essays is an important addition to these studies [...] and augments Ashgates excellent series on Women and Gender in the Early Modern World.' Renaissance Quarterly
'McIver and her authors seek to understand the various mechanisms that could render women visible or invisible, and by doing so, provide a more balanced understanding of the historical record. While some women, like nuns, chose (or were coerced) to be invisible, others might be overshadowed by powerful husbands, obscured by historical accident, or marginalized by remote locations. Regardless of the cause, McIvers volume successfully demonstrates that patronage, broadly defined, could provide these women with some degree of visibility.' European History Quarterly