Bestselling fantasist Katherine Kurtz combines magic, Freemasonry, and the revalation in this spellbinding tale of the American Revolution as it might have been . . . It's 1775, and in Europe, an... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I have not read any other books by Kurtz but picked this one up on a whim. She really mixes the Freemason myths and the American Revolution together well. I was amazed to discover that St Germain was a real person.Seeing the real Founding Fathers such as Washington, Revere, and Franklin alongside the fictional members of this conspiracy was great and I hope some producer decides to make it a movie.
Preety good
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I'm a Scot history buff as well as enamered by tales about our founding fathers. Lots of good background information, however it didn't seem to have much of a plot and if someone didn't know anything about Freemasionry you would be left very much in the dark.
Well written, superbly researched
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This book takes us back to the dark days when there was a very real possibility that the United States would fall back into the hands of the British government. Ms Kurtz' depiction of Freemasonry is sympathetic and treats the Craft far better than many authors have. But the meat of this book are the characters. She successfully depicts the character and morality of George Washington as few can. Well worth the price, and worthy of an honored place in your library.
Interesting insights into Freemasonry, in a fantasy setting.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
Katherine Kurtz does a credible job with the historical setting. Her ploy of using Freemasonry as a recruiting ground and cover for a deeper esoteric group, which shares considerable common interests with the Jacobite movement is compelling.The author's only flaw is during the initiation of the lady, when she exempts her from one requirement, but maintains another. This displays modern sensiblities, not those of an age where a proper lady would feel no compunction nursing an infant in public, but when no woman could expose her legs to view without scandal. The lady, her husband and the gentleman preparing her for the ritual, should have found it no more uncomfortable, and perhaps eaisier, to bare the left breast than to bare the left leg from the knee down. Knowing how modesty was practiced in that day, it was for me a jarring note.
This book took me places - literally
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 28 years ago
I consider a book great if, after I finish it, I can't stop thinking about it. After I read Katharine Kurtz's Two Crowns for America, I became so interested in colonial history that I visited George Washington's birthplace in Westmoreland County, VA and other Washington historical sites in Fredericksburg, VA. As a fan of historical fiction, my favorites are the ones that make well known figures more real and human; they do more than describe the heros and heroines as GREAT FIGURES IN HISTORY. The story is a wonderful blend of history and fantasy, making me wish it really happened this way. I would recommend this book to anyone hated history class in high school. They will find history is much more entertaining when Katherine Kurtz tells it
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