King of America
War was Only Half the Battle
by
Book Details
About the Book
In
the early 1800s a beautiful, rebellious American teenager was seduced and later
abandoned by the spoiled, ambitious youngest brother of Napoleon I. Little did
anyone realize at the time that the scandal, one of the most highly publicized
of the 19th Century, would set in motion a chain of events that a half-century
later would threaten to change the future of the world.
“King
of America” tells the forgotten story of how this scorned woman and her
offspring were pulled into a plot to turn the tide of the bloody American Civil
War. It posits how two sons of American privilege, Henry Adams, the grandson of
Presidents, and Cassius Clay, one of the most hated of Southern anti-slavery
abolitionists, join forces to foil the scheme.
The
novel combines the “coming of age” story of a 19th Century beauty’s painful
lessons in love and seduction, with the violent “buddy” adventure of two
diametrically different American patriots, who learn mutual respect while
trying to foil the evil plot. It deals with the earliest days of the Civil War,
when the brain trust behind the Confederate government realize their only
chance of winning secession is to secure the military support of a foreign
ally. France and its Emperor, Napoleon III, emerge as the best hope to extend
aid and recognition, which is how a family of American Bonapartes are brought
into the intrigue.
“King
of America” provides a believable, well-researched scenario for how the
Confederate offer was made and how it was foiled. Americans know the details of
the Civil War, but “King of America” tells the story they don’t know, the
foreign intrigue and diplomacy that had as much to do with the outcome of that
war as any battle.
About the Author
Bob
Keith Bonebrake has spent nearly 20 years as a writer, editor and researcher,
working for the Associated Press and other news and publishing groups in