December 05, 2012

International Giveaway!! Agents of Reason by John Issitt



In July 1789 the working class Jeremiah was training to be a dissenting minister. He was a political radical who thought the French Revolution would spread and introduce a fairer society.  His highly respectable tutors wanted reform but were unwilling to put themselves in danger. They recruited him to promote their interests and arranged his employment with the Aristocrat Charles Earl of Stanhope ostensibly as tutor to his children but in reality to coordinate the actions of reformers. He organized radical groups, helped print Tom Paine’s Rights of Man and attempted to expose the injustices of William Pitt’s aristocratic government. In his lifetime he was a dangerous man to know. Association with him could result in charges of sedition or treason and a trip to Botany Bay. Little was therefore written down and if it was, quickly destroyed.  Furthermore, Jeremiah was used when it suited his upper class associates and ignored when he became an embarrassment. Records of his doings are therefore very few – a silence which motivates the writing of this novel.

Agents of Reason emerges from 20 years of research, a doctorate and 4 summers snatching every possible second to write. Built from real events and real characters it opens with news of the Fall of the Bastille and closes with the Treason trials of 1794.

Jeremiah and his associates don’t figure very highly in the standard histories.  Their lives and contribution have been subject to an historical eraser through the combination of minimal archival record, later embarrassments about former enthusiasms and a historical focus on the more profile historical actors Jeremiah worked quietly behind the scenes – he never took centre stage.

Agents of Reason was written in the interests of recovering a man whose actions have been critical in securing the freedoms we enjoy today.

John Issitt works part time for the Department of Education, is Provost of Langwith College and a National Teaching Fellow; visit the author's site at http://johnissitt.blogspot.co.uk and look for his book on Amazon Marketplace and in eBook format.


GIVEAWAY of An AUTOGRAPHED Paperback, open to all Historical Fiction Connection followers!!
Please enter by leaving a comment for the author, and leave me your email address so that I may contact the winner!
+1 entry for each facebook share, twitter share and blog post linking to this post. Must leave me the link to your share.
Good luck!



Giveaway ends December 14, 2012
Winner has 24 hours to respond with their mailing address.

14 comments:

  1. Agents of Reason sounds like a book I would love to read!!

    Heather
    bcrocks_ca@hotmail.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hope it turns out that you do. You can look at my blogspot for my readings and an extract http://johnissitt.blogspot.co.uk

      Best

      John

      Delete
  2. Wow. I love books that bring out the bits of history that are not taught in the classroom. I had no idea....
    kaiminani at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  3. This was such a tragic time - high ideals run amok. In spite of the horrors and the terrors, I enjoy reading about this period. Thanks for the giveaway.
    lcbrower40(at)gmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was also a time when the pattern of UK politics for the following two hundred years was established.

      Best

      John

      Delete
  4. I haven't read many books set during this time, but this sounds like a good mix of information and storytelling!

    Thanks for the giveaway!

    lafra86 at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a very important time - especially in terms of the progressive demand for fair representation.

      Best

      John

      Delete
  5. I have to agree with Patty, I also love reading books about history that I wouldn't have learned elsewhere. I just finished a great historical fiction titled, "Shadow of the Sun" by Merrie P. Wycoff. I learned about the treachery, political intrigue and religious strife of the 18th Dynasty in Egypt. I had no idea. I Am constantly on the look out for great books. Can't wait to check out "Agent of Reason." Thank you for the wonderful suggestion.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I haven't read much regarding the French revolution so this would be interesting.

    tweeted:
    +1 HISTORICAL FICTION CONNECTION: International Giveaway!! Agents of Reason by John ...

    Margaret
    singitm(at)hotmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  7. That sounds like a super interesting book, I would love to be able to read it and learn a little bit more about that time in history.
    Karis
    polkadotpanda101(at)gmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sounds like a wonderful read. Would John Isset be interested in being interviewed on my blog A Writer of History?

    ReplyDelete
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