Behind closed doors and polite language, Mary Todd Lincoln was declared unstable-not by a jury of peers, but by men who found her grief inconvenient, her memory dangerous, and her refusal to disappear unacceptable. She was confined without charge. Examined without consent. Pressured into silence for the comfort of institutions more concerned with reputation than justice.Through meticulously researched events and powerfully imagined interior truths, The Verdict of Men exposes how a male-dominated legal and medical system confused grief with guilt-and control with care. In parallel, the novel revisits the execution of Mary Surratt, asking whether America repeated the same injustice twice, simply refining its methods.This is a story about power disguised as protection.About silence demanded as dignity.About a woman who refused to be erased.Early Reader ReviewMore than a historical narrative-this is a moral reckoning.Through meticulous research and restrained imagination, The Verdict of Men interrogates how legal and medical authority converged to confine a woman whose only crime was refusing to grieve on command. Sidney St. James does not ask readers to excuse History-but to see it clearly. This book will resonate with anyone interested in women's History, justice, and the long shadow of power.Publisher's Advance ReviewUncomfortable, precise, and deeply human.Mary Todd Lincoln has too often been reduced to caricature. In this compelling narrative, Sidney St. James refuses that simplification. The Verdict of Men reframes her life after Lincoln's assassination as a story of endurance rather than instability, revealing how a grieving woman became a problem to be managed. The result is a sobering reflection on how societies silence those who refuse to disappear quietly.Independent Editorial ReviewA masterclass in restraint and moral clarity.Rather than sensationalizing tragedy, The Verdict of Men allows documented History and human consequence to speak for themselves. St. James uses creative historical nonfiction to illuminate what official records omit-the emotional and psychological toll of being judged without crime. This is a book that respects its subject, its readers, and the gravity of History itself.