The Seven Daughters of Eve is about mitochondrial genetics. Mitochondrial DNA is inherited only from mothers, so the inheritance pattern of mtDNA is exactly like that of an asexually reproducing species. So yes, you can trace the mitochondrial ancestry of each person alive today back to exactly one of the "seven daughters of eve" and the mtDNA of all the other women alive at that time died out. But that doesn't mean that the rest of their genetic material didn't survive. Any woman who had only sons – no matter how many sons she had, or how reproductively successful they were – appears to have died out from the mitochondrial perspective. For that matter, from the mitochondrial view, every man who has ever lived failed to reproduce. Obviously that's not the case when we look at the full picture of all of our genetic material. There's a lot of focus on the mtDNA and Y chromosome lineages because they're linear and therefore relatively static (i.e. evolve at a slow, predictable rate), but it's important to keep in mind that this isn't how most of our genetic material behaves. In particular, you cannot understand sexual genetics by studying mtDNA and Y chromosome inheritance because those lineages are asexual, which is precisely why they are easier to study.