
The chronology (timeline) reaches into the present century, and there's an appendix dedicated to Sicilian women today.

Significantly, the book treats Sicily as the sovereign nation most of these women knew, and not as a 'region' of the unified Italy or a tiny piece of Europe. In addition to these profiles - most of these women lived before 1500 - the author presents a general survey and chronology of Sicilian history. The lengthier ten biographies constitute full chapters, while seven are concise sketches of a few paragraphs each. Theirs are inspiring stories of the courage of conviction bursting forth to overcome the challenges of adversity. Meet a timeless sisterhood of pious Roman maidens, steadfast Sicilian queens, and a Jewish mother who confronted the horrors of the Inquisition.

Here one of Sicily's most popular historians introduces seventeen women of varied backgrounds who defied convention to make their mark in the annals of the complex history of the world's most conquered island. Rarely have women found their place in the chronicles of Sicily's thirty-century history.
