Chronicling America during the turbulent period from 1906 to 1917, John Jakes captures the lives of the men and women who colored a nation's future. American Dreams follows the children of the German-immigrant Crown family first introduced in Homeland: actress Fritzi Crown, a woman of formidable ambition and fierce independence, as she travels from the tawdry haunts of Broadway to California and its silent pictures, meeting the giants and pioneers of the industry Griffith, Pickford, Chaplin, and others. . . Carl Crown, the wanderer seeking new thrills in the fast-paced world of car racing and aviation, whose wanderlust takes him from Detroit and an encounter with Henry Ford to the Mexican Revolution, and ultimately to the war-torn skies over France during World War I . . . and Paul Crown, idealistic movie makers and famous newsreel cameraman, who finds his destiny filming the devastation and horror of World War I.
". . . . a master at the ancient art of storytelling. "
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American Dreams
"John Jakes. . . make history come alive. "
Chronicling America during the turbulent period from 1906 to 1917, John Jakes captures the lives of the men and women who colored a nation's future. American Dreams follows the children of the German-immigrant Crown family first introduced in Homeland: actress Fritzi Crown, a woman of formidable ambition and fierce independence, as she travels from the tawdry haunts of Broadway to California and its silent pictures, meeting the giants and pioneers of the industry Griffith, Pickford, Chaplin, and others. . . Carl Crown, the wanderer seeking new thrills in the fast-paced world of car racing and aviation, whose wanderlust takes him from Detroit and an encounter with Henry Ford to the Mexican Revolution, and ultimately to the war-torn skies over France during World War I . . . and Paul Crown, idealistic movie makers and famous newsreel cameraman, who finds his destiny filming the devastation and horror of World War I.
". . . . a master at the ancient art of storytelling. "
Chronicling America during the turbulent period from 1906 to 1917, John Jakes captures the lives of the men and women who colored a nation's future. American Dreams follows the children of the German-immigrant Crown family first introduced in Homeland: actress Fritzi Crown, a woman of formidable ambition and fierce independence, as she travels from the tawdry haunts of Broadway to California and its silent pictures, meeting the giants and pioneers of the industry Griffith, Pickford, Chaplin, and others. . . Carl Crown, the wanderer seeking new thrills in the fast-paced world of car racing and aviation, whose wanderlust takes him from Detroit and an encounter with Henry Ford to the Mexican Revolution, and ultimately to the war-torn skies over France during World War I . . . and Paul Crown, idealistic movie makers and famous newsreel cameraman, who finds his destiny filming the devastation and horror of World War I.
". . . . a master at the ancient art of storytelling. "
John Jakes, "the godfather of the historical novel," is the author of The Kent Family Chronicles, North and South, California Gold, and Homeland, and has more than 50 million copies of his books in print. He lives in South Carolina and Connecticut with his wife, rachel.
John Jakes, "the godfather of the historical novel," is the author of The Kent Family Chronicles, North and South, California Gold, and Homeland, and has more than 50 million copies of his books in print. He lives in South Carolina and Connecticut with his wife, rachel.
Table of Contents
What People are Saying About This
Kirkus Reviews
"Realistic detail and period color galore keep this swift-moving story grounded in the sunset of a largely agrarian America as the automobile and WWI arrive to shake the republic out of its golden idyll."
--Kirkus Reviews
Interviews
Before the live bn.com chat, John Jakes agreed to answer some of our questions.Q:
In your opinion, what has been the most exciting time period to live in?
A:
There are any number of historical eras I'd love to visit if I had a time machine: Shakespeare's London (taking in a performance at the Globe), Europe in the age of Napoleon, England in the bawdy Restoration period (but be careful to get your shots first and go armed in the streets after dark). Realistically, though, I feel that the most exciting period will be the 50 or 100 years just ahead, when my 11 grandchildren will find their careers, and live out their lives, in an unpredictable and ever-changing century I wish I could see.
Q:
Why does writing historical fiction appeal to you?
A:
The past, like the present, is packed with dramatic events and colorful personalities, but in writing about the past I have the benefit of decades of scholarship to put the historical record in better perspective than we have for present events in this era of government secrecy, hush-hush diplomatic negotiations, et cetera. There is also a kind of romantic glow to the past as it recedes from us -- certainly not entirely realistic, or justified, if you look at the grim and grimy record of most eras. But this aura is very real for millions nonetheless. Some of this romantic feeling enlivens most good historical fiction, including, I hope, mine.
Q:
What are your favorite five books? Your favorite historical movie?
A:
Great Expectations. Charles Dickens is my No. 1 literary idol, and this is one of his masterpieces (along with Bleak House). It's also one of his most accessible novels. I've just completed the book and lyrics for a musical theater version of the novel (score by composer Mel Marvin), which will have its world premiere at our new $10 million Self Family Arts Center on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, in April 1999. Obviously a labor of love!
The Count of Monte Cristo. Of all the historical novels I read as a youngster, this is the one that hooked me on the form.
Anthony Adverse. Hervey Allen's towering 1933 work may be the best historical novel of this century -- despite its dated and wrongful attitudes toward slavery.
Lonesome Dove. One of the great novels of this century, in my estimation, and possibly the best ever written about the American West.
The Martian Chronicles. This hooked me on science fiction, and Ray Bradbury, whom I tried to imitate with my own SF stories written as a teenager (I sold my first when I was 18).
P.S. This is a very difficult list to make, leaving out some equally deserving favorites such as The Great Gatsby, Hammett, Faulkner, Ragtime, John Dos Passos's U.S.A. trilogy, et cetera.
Film: "Dodge City." The "history" in this 1939 Errol Flynn epic for Warner Bros. is dubious to nonexistent, yet I vividly remember seeing the picture as a seven-year-old kid in Terre Haute, Indiana, where it had an enormous impact, introducing me to the drama and color of the American past.