

Explore Gilded Age New York through the lens of Alice Austen, who captured the social rituals of New York’s leisured class and the bustling streets of the modern city. Celebrated as a queer artist, she was this and much more
Alice Austen (1866–1952) lived at Clear Comfort, her grandparent’s Victorian cottage on Staten Island, which is now a National Historic Landmark. As a teenager, she devoted herself to photography, recording what she called “the larky life” of tennis matches, yacht races, and lavish parties.
When she was 25 and expected to marry, Austen used her camera to satirize gender norms by posing with her friends in their undergarments and in men’s clothes, “smoking” cigarettes, and feigning drunkenness. As she later remarked, she was “too good to get married.” Austen embraced the rebellious spirit of the “New Woman,” a moniker given to those who defied expectations by pursuing athletics, higher education, or careers. She had romantic affairs with women, and at 31, she met Gertrude Tate, who became her life partner. Briefly, Austen considered becoming a professional photographer. She illustrated Bicycling for Ladies, a guide written by her friend Violet Ward, and she explored the working-class neighborhoods of Manhattan to produce a portfolio, “Street Types of New York.” Rejecting the taint of commerce, however, she remained within the confines of elite society with Tate by her side.
Although interest in Austen has accelerated since 2017, when the Alice Austen House was designated a national site of LGBTQ history, the only prior book on Austen was published in 1976. Copiously illustrated, Too Good to Get Married fills the need for a fresh and deeply researched look at this skillful and witty photographer. Through analysis of Austen’s photographs, Yochelson illuminates the history of American photography and the history of sexuality.
- Price: $39.95
- Pages: 288
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: Fordham University Press
- Imprint: Empire State Editions
- Publication Date: 3rd June 2025
- Trim Size: 8 x 10 in
- Illustration Note: 142 b/w illustrations
- ISBN: 9781531509507
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / LGBT Studies / Gay Studies
PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Historical
The first major biography of Alice Austen to appear in nearly fifty years. Yochelson offers a new and compelling appraisal of this significant woman photographer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, integrating Austen’s intimate woman-centered life with her evolving photography.---Kathy Peiss, Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor Emerita of American History at the University of Pennsylvania
Much of photohistory—and the photography discourse during Alice Austen’s time—is preoccupied with photography’s artistic status and its evolving documentary capacities. Yochelson posits a different concern: photography as social currency. This engaging biography is also an incisive social history, ranging from the Gilded Age to feminism. The protagonists and the period come to life vividly as a result of extensive primary research, while Yochelson also encourages the reader to think about what went unspoken: views that were simply assumed to be shared by all, or feelings for which direct language didn’t exist.---Britt Salvesen, Curator and Head, Wallis Annenberg Photography Department, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
An engaging, lively, and insightful look at the life and work of photographer Alice Austen, a pioneering figure in women’s and lesbian history whose story has not been well-told until now. Yochelson carefully and thoughtfully assesses Austen’s life as a moving and revealing lens on the place of women in the United States and New York in a period of dramatic change.---Stephen Vider, author of The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity After World War II
Finally! After seventy-five years in relative obscurity, we have a genuine biographical study of this pioneering, elusive woman. Alice Austen was a brilliant early photographer, whose name ought to be well-known. She led a generally cloistered, privileged life on Staten Island, until her tragic end. But she produced a huge body of innovative, experimental work that now at last is getting the attention it deserves. And in these pages we find the complex person behind it, a modern-day lesbian icon who carried all the usual prejudices of the industrial era aristocracy. You can find no better guide for the life and work of Miss Austen.---Peter-Christian Aigner, Director, The Gotham Center for New York City History
Too Good to Get Married is an assiduous, revealing biography of a complex early feminist photographer who carved her own path.- Foreword Reviews
A sensitive portrait of a prolific photographer.---Kirkus Reviews
Bonnie Yochelson traces the extraordinary story of how a 19th-century upper-class social butterfly became a pioneering woman photographer who lived most of her life in a loving lesbian partnership. Alice Austen, with all her complexities and remarkable talent, comes alive in these engaging pages. Too Good to Get Married is a wonderful read.---Lillian Faderman, author of Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in 20th-Century America
Explore Gilded Age New York through the lens of Alice Austen, who captured the social rituals of New York’s leisured class and the bustling streets of the modern city. Celebrated as a queer artist, she was this and much more
Alice Austen (1866–1952) lived at Clear Comfort, her grandparent’s Victorian cottage on Staten Island, which is now a National Historic Landmark. As a teenager, she devoted herself to photography, recording what she called “the larky life” of tennis matches, yacht races, and lavish parties.
When she was 25 and expected to marry, Austen used her camera to satirize gender norms by posing with her friends in their undergarments and in men’s clothes, “smoking” cigarettes, and feigning drunkenness. As she later remarked, she was “too good to get married.” Austen embraced the rebellious spirit of the “New Woman,” a moniker given to those who defied expectations by pursuing athletics, higher education, or careers. She had romantic affairs with women, and at 31, she met Gertrude Tate, who became her life partner. Briefly, Austen considered becoming a professional photographer. She illustrated Bicycling for Ladies, a guide written by her friend Violet Ward, and she explored the working-class neighborhoods of Manhattan to produce a portfolio, “Street Types of New York.” Rejecting the taint of commerce, however, she remained within the confines of elite society with Tate by her side.
Although interest in Austen has accelerated since 2017, when the Alice Austen House was designated a national site of LGBTQ history, the only prior book on Austen was published in 1976. Copiously illustrated, Too Good to Get Married fills the need for a fresh and deeply researched look at this skillful and witty photographer. Through analysis of Austen’s photographs, Yochelson illuminates the history of American photography and the history of sexuality.
- Price: $39.95
- Pages: 288
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: Fordham University Press
- Imprint: Empire State Editions
- Publication Date: 3rd June 2025
- Trim Size: 8 x 10 in
- Illustrations Note: 142 b/w illustrations
- ISBN: 9781531509507
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / LGBT Studies / Gay Studies
PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Historical
The first major biography of Alice Austen to appear in nearly fifty years. Yochelson offers a new and compelling appraisal of this significant woman photographer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, integrating Austen’s intimate woman-centered life with her evolving photography.---Kathy Peiss, Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor Emerita of American History at the University of Pennsylvania
Much of photohistory—and the photography discourse during Alice Austen’s time—is preoccupied with photography’s artistic status and its evolving documentary capacities. Yochelson posits a different concern: photography as social currency. This engaging biography is also an incisive social history, ranging from the Gilded Age to feminism. The protagonists and the period come to life vividly as a result of extensive primary research, while Yochelson also encourages the reader to think about what went unspoken: views that were simply assumed to be shared by all, or feelings for which direct language didn’t exist.---Britt Salvesen, Curator and Head, Wallis Annenberg Photography Department, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
An engaging, lively, and insightful look at the life and work of photographer Alice Austen, a pioneering figure in women’s and lesbian history whose story has not been well-told until now. Yochelson carefully and thoughtfully assesses Austen’s life as a moving and revealing lens on the place of women in the United States and New York in a period of dramatic change.---Stephen Vider, author of The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity After World War II
Finally! After seventy-five years in relative obscurity, we have a genuine biographical study of this pioneering, elusive woman. Alice Austen was a brilliant early photographer, whose name ought to be well-known. She led a generally cloistered, privileged life on Staten Island, until her tragic end. But she produced a huge body of innovative, experimental work that now at last is getting the attention it deserves. And in these pages we find the complex person behind it, a modern-day lesbian icon who carried all the usual prejudices of the industrial era aristocracy. You can find no better guide for the life and work of Miss Austen.---Peter-Christian Aigner, Director, The Gotham Center for New York City History
Too Good to Get Married is an assiduous, revealing biography of a complex early feminist photographer who carved her own path.– Foreword Reviews
A sensitive portrait of a prolific photographer.---Kirkus Reviews
Bonnie Yochelson traces the extraordinary story of how a 19th-century upper-class social butterfly became a pioneering woman photographer who lived most of her life in a loving lesbian partnership. Alice Austen, with all her complexities and remarkable talent, comes alive in these engaging pages. Too Good to Get Married is a wonderful read.---Lillian Faderman, author of Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in 20th-Century America