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Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Gary M. Williams

Gone but Not Forgotten

Pages: 302 Ratings: 5.0
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Gone but Not Forgotten is the first of a historical fiction trilogy set in America and Europe from 1914 to 1918. It chronicles the tale of the Gilded Age of pageantry through the end of the Great War. It is the story of the Champions, the Wagners and the Sterns, an epical saga of their lives, trials, and tribulations. The story opens at an outdoor wedding in fashionable Newport, Rhode Island. The heroines are beautiful twin sisters, Veda and Rose Champion. Veda is the spoiled American debutante with an iron will. Rose is the gentler beauty and is passively strong.

Hans Wagner, the male protagonist, is a German immigrant who comes to America with the quest to live his dream. His best Jewish friend, Rudolph Stern, also arrives from Germany to study medicine. The toils of the Great War halt the hopes of both while ushering in a series of tragedies for the Champion family, including the sinking of the Lusitania, the death of the twins’ brother, Marius Champion, on the battlefields of France, and the vicious murder of their grandparents in Verdon.

The novel will be followed by two others, spanning 1918–2000. The trilogy is a portrait of the most significant events in the twentieth century.

Gary M. Williams was born and raised in Staten Island, New York. He was a teacher and principal with the New York City Department of Education for thirty five years. He is currently retired and lives in Manhattan. He is enjoying the success of his novel, Gone but Not Forgotten, the first of his second book of the trilogy. The third, Gone but Not Betrayed, is now in production. He was inspired to write the story after visits to Newport Rhode Island and Europe. He hopes you will enjoy this revisit to the past, an era never to be forgotten.
Customer Reviews
5.0
1 reviews
1 reviews
  • M. L.

    Through thoughtful and rich descriptions of characters and events, the author conjures up a compelling story about affluent families at the end of the Gilded Age in America and Europe who—despite all their elegance, power, and wealth —face life-changing personal trials and suffering. The novel gradually peels away the gilded layers of these seemingly perfect lives to uncover much deeper and darker stories of each individual character. I highly recommend this book because it allows the reader to become closely familiar with each family’s life and struggles, while also embedding these personal stories into a larger, more complex context of the era here and abroad. I look forward to reading the second part of the trilogy.

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