Cincinnati: Cranston & Stowe, 1887) is a two-volume biographical dictionary for young adults by E. J. Richmond, an American author who consulted authorities on the subject in preparing the work.
These two volumes of about 300 duodecimo pages each, are made up of sketches of the lives and characters of 65 women[a] who achieved distinction in their generation.
[2][3] In sketching these varied characters, most of whom won a conspicuous place in history, Richmond aimed, as she states in her preface, to prove "the power of woman for good or evil."
This she does, not in elaborate biographical essays, but in plain, lucid outlines of the characteristic incidents of their several lives.
One may not accept all her estimates of their worth; yet viewing her sketches as biographical condensations written in simple style, one may view them as digests of many historical facts, adapted to inform the general reader, and to increase the desire of young minds for more information of the times in which these women lived, of the circumstances which made them what they were, and of the impress they left on the communities in which they performed their several parts in life.