
This is a favorite. I've always considered it the
anti-Fountainhead. And if I were high school English
teacher I would have students read The Fountainhead
and then Captains and the Kings. It is definitely
a bit of an iconoclastic "How the World Really Works" entry.
A fat, pulpy, romantic relationship based view of
how "the system" creates certain people and they in
turn create it. I typed up her foreward below which would
probably sink any novel today but I guess back in the 70's
it was a bestseller and they even made a mini-series on
television from it that was very popular I guess.
Captains and the Kings.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captains_and_the_KingsCaptains 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 arrives penniless as a teenager in
the United States of America. An inter-generational saga focusing on the themes of the American dream,
discrimination and bigotry in American life, and of history as made by a cabal of the rich and powerful, it
was one of the top 10 best-sellers of 1972, as ranked by the New York Times Best Seller List. Caldwell
drew heavily on aspects of the Kennedy family, John D. Rockefeller and Howard Hughes.
The book was adapted into an eight part television miniseries by NBC in the 1976 broadcast season, starring
Richard Jordan, Charles Durning, Blair Brown, David Huffman, Patty Duke and a star laden supporting cast.
Duke won an Emmy Award for her performance. Jordan won a Golden Globe award and an Emmy nomination
for his performance. Burning was nominated for both an Emmy and a Golden Globe. Beverly D'Angelo made her debut.
From the 1972 foreword:"This book is dedicated to the young people of America, who are rebelling because they know something is very
wrong in their country, but do not know just what it is. I hope this book will help to enlighten them.
There is not, to my knowledge any family like the "Armagh Family" in America, nor has there ever been, and all
characters, except those obviously historical, are my own invention. However, the historical background and the
political background of this novel are authentic. The "Committee for Foreign Studies" does indeed exist, today
as of yesterday, and so does the "Scardo Society," but not by these names.
There is indeed a "plot against the people," and probably always will be, for government has always been hostile
towards the governed. It is not a new story, and the conspirators and conspiracies have varied from era to era,
depending on the political and economic situation in their various countries.
But it was not until the era of the League of Just Men and Karl Marx that conspirators and conspiracies became
one, with one aim, one objective, and one determination. This has nothing to do with any "ideology" or form
of government, or ideals or "materialism" or any other catchphrases generously fed to the unthinking
masses. It has absolutely nothing to do with races or religions, for the conspirators are beyond what they
call "such trivialities." They are also beyond good and evil. The Caesars they put into power are their
creatures, whether they know it or not, and the peoples of all nations are helpless, whether they live
in America, Europe, Russia, China, Africa, or South America. They will always be helpless until they are
aware of their real enemy.
President John F. Kennedy knew what he was talking about when he spoke of the "Gnomes of Zurich."
Perhaps he knew too much! Coups d'etat are an old story, but they are now growing too numerous.
This is probably the last hour for mankind as a rational species, before it becomes the slave of a
"planned society." A bibliography ends this book, and I hope many of my readers will avail themselves
of the facts. That is all the hope I have.
Taylor Caldwell
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer