I would read this nine volume series again, if only for this book. This book is phenomenal historical-fiction. This’ll likely be the only review I write for the series, unless I re-read the books, because too much happens throughout their course, but it is a wonderful portrayal of the American Revolution.
Book is marked as LDS, which doesn’t make a lot of sense outside of the marketing niche, considering the LDS didn’t exist in the time period this book is based off of and are not ever mentioned in any of the texts for that very reason. Maybe the author is, but the book isn’t. What this book does have is a solid yet unobtrusive portrayal of how religion affected the early stages of the country.
That aside, this book is as much about the Iroquois as it is the British and the Americans, and, as always, all sides are equally justified (by the writing in the text, if not morally). There are good people on all sides of things, people to care about, and that is the exemplary takeaway from this series. It is treated benevolently as the tale of the venerated story that it is, in which every character written into reality by the threads of history is treated with the care a storyteller might give to his own fictional characters.
Battle of Saratoga kills in the very best way. Literally, too. In the very worst way? I suppose. Benedict Arnold has what is typically called a character arc, and he was even a real person, I think. The Iroquois focus does wonders. They were a large aspect of the battles that this book hones in on and they play a splendid part in all of them. The dynamic between the two fictional main characters is developed better than almost every other fictional friendship I’ve read, which is astonishing considering every fictional character is singularly representative of a large majority of people living in the time period.