
In 2001, Bruce Clayton, writing in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, described the memoir as a "self-serving apologia". Wilson in the preparation of this volume was apparently more concerned with sales than producing a book of permanent historical value." That said, in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, historians used My Memoir to examine topics like race in the Progressive Era and the policy influence of First Ladies, and to reevaluate the role of Wilson as a powerful political player in her own right. That is its sole virtue, although much of it consists of incidental comment on other notables." In The American Historical Review, Charles Callan Tansill wrote in 1940, "it is a pity that the ghost writer who assisted Mrs. The New York Times wrote that "A winning and credible Woodrow Wilson emerges from the grateful pages of My Memoir. Another review headlined that "Intimate Details Will Boost Sales of 'My Memoir'".


Robertson concluded that while the book would likely never be "accepted as historical documents are", it was "a fascinating and revealing love story" and "at its highest, it is valuable addition to one's knowledge" of Woodrow Wilson. A 1939 review published in The Vancouver Sun by David Robertson noted that Woodrow was the "central figure" in the memoir and felt that it "reveals the man" in a book of "rare delicacy". The reviewer felt the only real value of the book was its account of her husband's stroke and last days in office. Reception Ī contemporary review in The Virginia Quarterly Review considered the book not "a document of historical importance" but "delightful" as a "collection of episodes". In the memoir, she emphasizes that her husband's doctors urged Edith to serve as "steward" of the presidency. Slagell and Susan Zaeske, writing in Inventing a Voice: The Rhetoric of American First Ladies of the Twentieth Century, feel that the book had two purposes: to "garner credit for the strenuous work she performed in her role as first lady" and to defend her husband's legacy in the face of perceived attacks from the likes of John Singer Sargent and Joseph P. In the foreword of the book, she wrote of an intent to reveal "the truth concerning personal matters which has often been distorted by the misinformed". The book focuses on her time with Woodrow with several chapters of background on her life. It was published by Bobbs-Merrill Company. Wilson wrote the memoir and picked Woodrow's first biographer, Ray Stannard Baker, to create "a fortress around her husband's vulnerabilities and shortcomings and magnif his achievements".

For the remainder of her husband's presidency, she managed the office of the president, a role she later described as a "stewardship", and determined which communications and matters of state were important enough to bring to the attention of the bedridden president. Edith Wilson is notable for the influential role she played in President Wilson's administration following the severe stroke he suffered in October 1919. She married the widower Wilson in December 1915, during his first term as president. Edith Wilson was the second wife of President Woodrow Wilson, and First Lady of the United States from 1915 to 1921.
