The Second Life of John Wilkes Booth
By (Author) Barnaby Conrad
Council Oak Books
Council Oak Books
7th January 2011
United States
General
Fiction
813.54
Hardback
258
Width 158mm, Height 231mm, Spine 27mm
557g
A gripping historical thriller, this book is based on the often-advanced theory that Lincolns assassin was not killed in the barn in Virginia but escaped to a second life in the Wild West. Barnaby Conrad was told the plot in 1947 by Sinclair Lewis, while serving as personal secretary to the Nobel-Prize winning author. They agreed to coauthor the book, but only one of them lived to tell the tale. Conrad follows Booth as he secretly makes his way to Robert E. Lees headquarters, expecting to be received as a hero. Instead Lee believes him an impostor and drives him away. The penniless Booth flees on a riverboat up the Missouri River to Montana Territory and assumes a new identity in a rough frontier town. Just as Booth falls in love with a kind woman, a bloodhound-like reporter appears, the truth is revealed and justice is delivered a la Greek tragedy.
Barnaby Conrad is the author of more than 30 books, including "101 Best Beginnings Ever Written," "Dangerfield," "The Death of Manolete," "La Fiesta Brava," and "Matador," as well as the screenplay adaptation of John Steinbeck's "Flight." He is the founder of the Santa Barbara Writers Conference and a recipient of the O. Henry Prize.