Captains and the Kings

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Captains and the Kings
OCLC
318377470
Preceded byOn Growing Up Tough 
Followed byTo Look and Pass 

Captains and the Kings is a 1972 historical novel by Taylor Caldwell chronicling the rise to wealth and power of an Irish immigrant, Joseph Francis Xavier Armagh, who emigrates as a penniless teenager to the United States, along with his younger brother and baby sister, only for their parents to die shortly afterwards. Joseph Armagh befriends a Lebanese immigrant, and both are taken under the tutelage of an American plutocrat. The novel is an inter-generational saga that focuses on the themes of the American dream, discrimination, bigotry, and history that is being made by a cabal of the rich and powerful. The saga nears its end when Armagh succeeds in making his eldest son, Rory (modeled after John Fitzgerald Kennedy), a senator. When Rory is going to become the first Catholic President of the United States, he is assassinated by the cabal of the rich and powerful.

The novel was adapted as a 1976 television miniseries of the same name, starring Richard Jordan as Joseph Armagh.

Plot

Young Joseph Armagh, whose parents recently died after giving birth to his sister, is left to venture towards

Spanish-American War
and his daughter suffering a riding accident that rendered her into an infantile state. Much of Joseph's focus is on forcing his eldest son Rory to climb the political ladder in order to become the first Catholic President of the United States, at the expense of Rory's personal life, to include dissolving a marriage that Joseph believed would have been a political liability for Rory.

Release

It was one of the top 10 best-sellers of 1972, as ranked by The New York Times Best Seller list.[1] Caldwell drew heavily on aspects of the Kennedy family, John D. Rockefeller and Howard Hughes. However, Caldwell also states in the book's prologue that the Armagh family was entirely fictional and was not intended to lampoon or criticize any known figures.

Adaptation

The book was adapted into an eight-part television miniseries, also called

NBC in the 1976 broadcast season as part of its Best Sellers series.[2]

References

  1. .
  2. ^ "CAPTAINS AND THE KINGS (1976)". Fan TV. Archived from the original on November 3, 2016. Retrieved February 18, 2016.

External links