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American Dreams

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"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. "

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 29, 1998
      In the competent second volume (after Homeland) of his Crown family chronicles, Jakes portrays America during the turbulent period from 1906 to 1917. Once again, the story centers on the family of German-American patriarch and Chicago beer baron Joe Crown, whose headstrong daughter Fritzi defies her father to pursue a dreadfully unsuccessful New York stage career. In desperation, she surrenders to the lure of performing in moving pictures, which takes her to "empty, rural, and uncivilized" Hollywood, where she falls in love and achieves a measure of fame as a comic actress. Meanwhile, her brother Carl gets tossed out of Princeton, goes to work for eccentric car manufacturer Henry Ford, becomes a race-car driver with Barney Oldfield, "Speed King of the World," and flies as an ace pilot during WWI. Their cousin Paul is a professional news cameraman driven to record the horrors of war. He does not chase an American dream so much as become a chronicler of the world's nightmares. Once again, Jakes's strength is not in his splashy characters or cluttered plot, but in his knack for splicing in historical celebrities (ranging from Kaiser Wilhelm II to Mack Sennett) and details--Thomas Edison's pursuit of patent royalties on camera parts forced some studios to film in secret and inspired their move to California. Veteran saga-writer Jakes knows his reader's expectations and fulfills them with a solid, if predictable roman-fleuve. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club featured alternate; Reader's Digest Connotations Book Program selection.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      American Dreams is the second book in a planned trilogy that examines life in America from the mid-nineteenth century through modern times. The Crown family of Chicago, German immigrants who built a brewing empire, is the focus for this fascinating look at our history. Edward Herrmann's effortless and expressive delivery adds much life and dimension to the assorted cast of characters. Perhaps Herrmann's greatest contribution is his ability to blend a full range of emotion, from action to heartache, with seamless transitions from scene to scene. Although this abridged version seems short on historical fact and long on soap opera settings, it is well worth listeners' time. But Herrmann's reading is the shining star here and should not be missed. T.J.M. Winner of AUDIOFILE Earphones Award (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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