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.Settling her head more comfortably on thepillow, she turned toward the intense light.She'dquite forgotten the light shone through a window in aspecific house in a specific city inPage 332 ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.htmlAmerica-Or did it?She felt her strength waning.She was suddenlyashamed of her own fear.Guilty she might be.But what human being was not?There were things in her past she needn't be ashamed of;things to be proud of; she wouldn't surrenderso meekly to a condemning judgment-Thafs not what grandfather would have done.Slowly, her eyes closed.It was puzzling.The light remained.Growing steadily brighter-Suddenly, clear and sharp, she saw the vineto paradise.She spit on her hands and began to climb.AfterwordThe American Bicentennial Series hasproduced an immense and positive response fromreaders.One question is frequently asked: "What'strue and what isn't?" A short comment may be inorder.The Kent family, of course, is fictitious-butat all times, an effort has been made to makeeach of the Kentsrepresentativeof a certain type of person living in a particularera in American history.For instance:The grim circumstances faced by several of the familymembers in Volume III, THE SEEKERS,reflect the reality of the period: life on thecutting edge of western expansion was stark; brutal.Many were defeated by it; many others persevered.(but to romanticize or prettify the historicalrealities of such a period, it seems to me, woulddiminish the courage and determination of those who enduredand overcame its hardships.wereFactual details have helped shape the lives of thefictional characters.A good example from this volume isthe escaped slave in the packing box.(whatauthor would have the nerve to invent such a device?) Inthe period described, a man named Henry "Box"Brown actually made his escape to the north in thisfashion.As to actual events and people, I made a mentalpledge at the beginning of the Series that I would neverdeliberately or knowingly distort the record,whether of a battle, or the character of an historicalfigure as I saw him or her through the lens ofresearch.One or two small liberties withchronology have been taken in thefirst four novels, but that is the only sort ofdeviation I feel is defensible in books whichattempt to relate the story of our common past.I must admit to one compromise.Before I undertookthe writing, I acknowledged it would probably beimpossible to cover so much history without committingerrors; hopefully, careful research wouldkeep them minor comz in Volume I, THEBASTARD, which originally included a sequence in which amatch was struck-long before matches of that sort werePage 333 ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.htmlavailable.That one, mercifully, was caught in thegalley proofs.Accepting the probability of unintentional error wasthe price of seeing the work reach readers in areasonable time; I either had to run the risk or facetaking a lifetime to do the writing.Happily,the approach, with all its hazards, seems to have beenthe right one.A great number of men and women havewritten to say the Series has re-kindled adesire to delve deeper into American history.No writer or publisher could ask for a greaterreward.JOHN JAKESAbout theAuthorJohn Jakes was born in Chicago.He is agraduate of DePauw University, and took hisM.a.in literature at Ohio State.Hesold his first short story during his second year ofcollege, and his first book twelve months later.Since then, he has published more than 200 shortstories and over 50 books-chieflysuspense, nonfiction for young people, and, mostrecently, science fiction.He has also authoredsix popular historical novels under his JayScotland pseudonym.His books have appeared intranslation from Europe to Japan.Originallyintending to become an actor, Mr [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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