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Fiction. Thriller. Separated at birth by a desperate nurse who loses a millionaire's son to cot death, twin boys grow up without any knowledge of the other.Nat Cartwright lives with his middle-class birth parents and grows up to becomes a war hero in the Vietnam War before returning home to run for office in the Republican party.Fletcher Davenport becomes the only son of the millionaire couple. After graduating from Yale, he builds a reputation as a prolific criminal defence lawyer before he too delves into politics as a Democrat.Though their lives are entwined, and perfectly mirrored with tragedy and betrayal, neither men meet until one must defend the other for murder.A family saga of fate, political rivalry and extended lost family, perfect for fans of Jeffrey Archer's other suspense filled thrillers.Sons of Fortune is narrated by Michael Brandon, most famous for playing James Dempsey in the 1980's television crime drama, "Dempsey and Makepeace". His extensive theatre career spans Broadway and the West End, where he played Jerry Springer in \"Jerry Springer: the Opera\" for the National Theatre. -… (more)
User reviews
The story follows two boys—twins—who are separated at birth and grow up in very different circumstances. One lives with his birth parents, a poor couple who make sacrifice after sacrifice to ensure that their son has every possible advantage. The other grows up with wealthy parents who lavish him with material blessings while not neglecting to instill in him the value of a strong moral character. The narrative’s point of view switches between the two parallel stories for the entire book, providing the reader with a broad picture of life in mid-to-late-twentieth-century America.
As one might expect in a story about twins, the boys make similar choices at key moments in their lives, though the outcomes of their decisions are often very different. Both are interested in politics from a young age, though one finds success while the other falls victim to a devious opponent who continues to plague him throughout his life. One falls in love as a boy and marries his childhood sweetheart, while the other falls in and out of love with a variety of women. One is accepted to Yale, while the other is drafted and shipped off to Vietnam. Both make early friendships that help shape them as individuals, and both seem committed to doing the right thing in every situation.
Inevitably, the lives of the two unsuspecting brothers intersect when they each decide to mount a campaign for governor of Connecticut and end up running against each other. But as both work individually to shape the future, they cannot escape the past, and when the truth is finally revealed, the consequences are farther-reaching than either could have imagined.
Sons of Fortune is a lengthy book filled with fun anecdotes from the two men’s lives and several moving moments, but its effectiveness is reduced by an overreaching scope, as the book seems to be at least four stories in one. Part political thriller, part campus romance, part courtroom drama, and part a novel of corporate intrigue, the book begins to drag about halfway through. Despite this, Archer nicely weaves his story into the political and social climate of America’s “growing-up years,” and as always builds his characters in a very lifelike and relational manner. The dramatic ending will bother some readers who would prefer more closure after investing the time necessary to read more than 500 pages.
There is some objectionable content, most notably of a sexual nature as one of the brothers falls prey to society’s abandonment of moral standards in the 1960s and ’70s, but it is not explicit. For the most part the book upholds integrity and a kind of secular righteousness as both brothers become men of principle and in general succeed on the merits of their character.
Overall, while perhaps not in the same class as Kane & Abel, the book is good escapist fiction and will be enjoyed by Jeffrey Archer fans who are willing to overlook a bit of plot rambling and can enjoy the story for what it is.
These two sons – twins – who don’t know of each other’s existence are the best boys in the world, later ditto men. They do nothing
Apart from that it is a fantastic (as in fantasy) success story, where all energy is put into the two main characters – men – and where the women step aside, both for the main characters, but also for Archer’s writing. It was a long time since I read a modern book with so obvious sexism.
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En mycket välskriven historia. Tekniskt sett. Språket flyter oerhört bra. Lätt att läsa, även om det inte känns alltför enkelt. Men vad är det han skriver, karln?
Dessa båda söner - tvillingar - som inte känner varandras existens är världens bästa grabbar, senare dito män. De gör ingenting fel (nästan), de lyckas med allt de tar sig för och blir (naturligtvis) förmögna och populära. Båda ger sig in i politiken, på "var sin sida". Det gör det lite intressant, då det tydligt visas att de båda "partierna" i amerikansk politik verkligen inte skiljer sig särskilt mycket åt. Just här ligger romanens styrka också, tycker jag: Archer ger en inblick i hur det (ibland komplicerade) amerikanska politiska systemet är uppbyggt.
I övrigt är det en osannolik framgångshistoria, där allt krut offras på de båda huvudpersonerna - män - och där kvinnorna får stå till sidan, både för dessa romankaraktärer och Jeffrey Archers karaktärstecknande. Det var längesen jag läste en modern bok med så tydlig manschovinistisk underton.
But, nonetheless, an interesting read.
This though, oh
Overall, it's a well written book, and judging by the rating others appreciate it, yet I just wasn't able to really get into the first half of the book but if you can persevere you are rewarded with the unfolding story.