Taylor Caldwell often based her early novels in small-town Pennsylvania. Her political complications came from state politics that impinged on her protagonists. Surprisingly, since TC lived so long in Buffalo – within a 10 minute walk to where her grandchildren grew up – none of us know why she featured Pennsylvania so. As she did in Dynasty of Death and Testimony of Two Men.

Also ultra-prolific, and from Buffalo, was Joyce Carol Oates. This Princeton Professor attended the rival high school of TC's grandchildren, 3 to 5 years before them. Oates often used Buffalo and its viscinity as the backdrop of her novels. Notably in We were the Mulvaneys and The Falls (on Love Canal).

Today's e-book offering from TC is Tender Victory 10/6/19 Amazon, Apple, B&N, Google, Kobo $2.99. This novel's publication in 1956 was only a little past 1/3rd of TC's career, which ended in 1980 with Bright Flows the River after her incapacitation by a stroke.

Open Road has a short compelling review on its web site.
Rev. Johnny Fletcher serves wounded soldiers from the battlefield as a military chaplain during World War II. His forté is spiritual solace in the darkest of times, but his life changes when he performs a public heroic act: facing down an angry mob intent on attacking five young Holocaust survivors. Upon learning they have no homes or families to return to, Fletcher decides to bring them to America.

To his dismay, his coal-mining community of Barryfield, Pennsylvania, greets this makeshift family with prejudice and distrust. Beneath the town's placid surface run buried religious divisions. Fletcher's commitment to raising the children according to their individual faiths – two Protestant, two Catholic, and one Jewishi – meets with horrific levels of intolerance. Dealing with such prejudice turns more sinister still when a local newspaper publisher cynically uses the story for his own purposes.

Together with Lorry Summerfield, the beautiful, disillusioned daughter of Barryfield's most powerful figure, Fletcher must try to awaken the townspeople to the better angels of their nature before it's too late.
We have often heard avid TC readers remark that wars and priests are among her favorite paired topics. We invite any readers to feel free to show your interest in learning more about TC. Her life was full of drama and conflict with accompanying pain, some self-inflicted and other-directed.

Michael Fried, Grandson
For the Descendants of Taylor Caldwell



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