When political royalty moves to a small town, anything can happen.

In Queens’ Row, as Eisenhower struggles to keep a third world war at bay, a small town wrestles with changing expectations of motherhood, gender norms, and the bonds of love, family, and friendship.

Queens’ Row takes us back to June of 1960, at Gettysburg Country Club, where Professor Grace Gilmartin and her friends reign supreme over the latest gossip—from President Eisenhower’s latest meeting with Nikita Khrushchev to the lifeguard’s latest crush. 

The summer is shaping up to be like any other, until “Ike” announces that once his second term is up, he and his family will be moving to their sleepy little Pennsylvania town–whose only other claim to fame begins and ends with the Civil War. 

Gettysburg’s glamourous new residents up the social ante, and whoever makes the cut for the famous family’s inner circle quickly becomes the talk of the town. 

Against the backdrop of manicured golf courses, political intrigue, and powerful secrets, Grace and her friends are invited to dinner at the White House, where a die is cast that will turn their world upside down. 

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Author: Hannah Huber

With special introduction by Leslie Trew Magraw

genre: historical fiction

ISBN Paperback: 978-9-0903-7459-8 // ISBN Ebook: 979-8-2230-4690-5

release date: October 2023 (242 pages)

Published by: Amsterdam Academy Press

Available in paperback €14,95 and as e-book €9,95

Book cover artwork: Joe Webb / Book cover design: Glenn Doherty & Cigdem Guven

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About the author, Hannah Huber

Hannah Huber is founder of Amsterdam Academy Press, enabling authors to put their work out into the world with as much agency as possible. Born and raised in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Hannah moved to Amsterdam for her master’s in American Studies and has called the Netherlands ‘home’ ever since. She lives in a small village just outside Amsterdam, with her Dutch husband and three children.

Author photo: Ami Elsius

Reviews of Queens’ Row

The Cold War comes crashing home in this fast-paced story, which is as redolent of the 1960s as the smell of baby oil on a pool deck. As her characters work on their sun tans, Huber invites us to examine their social privileges, as well as the constraints that come with being a woman.
— Katy Hull, Assistant Professor of Modern Gender History, University of Amsterdam
Queens’ Row is about being a young woman at a time when gender roles and identities were evolving rapidly in America; through Grace, we are reminded of the struggles women faced at the beginning of that (r)evolution. It’s also a very human story that explores family ties, friendship, the weight of obligation, and the process of surviving trauma caused by abandonment.
— Rebecca Blunden

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