Sisterhood of the Rose

The Recollection of Celeste Levesque

$24.95

72 in stock

Imprint: Disinformation Books
Availability: In stock

Book Details

Pages

384 Pages

Size

6 x 9

Format

Hardcover

Pub. Date

11/01/2009

ISBN

978-1-934708-29-3

Publisher

Red Wheel Weiser

Authors

A native of Fort Worth, Texas, Jim Marrs has worked for several Texas newspapers, including the Fort Worth StarTelegram. After a leave of absence to serve with Fourth Army intelligence during the Vietnam War, he became a military and aerospace writer for the newspaper and an investigative reporter. Since 1980, Marrs has been a freelance writer, author, and frequently invited public speaker.

Late in World War II, Adolf Hitler is about to achieve his greatest victory: the capture of Solomon’s Treasure, the world’s most sacred treasure trove, representing both gold and precious gems as well as ancient knowledge. He believes it will guarantee his dream of a thousandyear Reich.

Jim Marrs presents an edgy combination of fact and fiction in this widereaching story of ancient secrets uncovered in the midst of war. The first novel from Marrs, this book follows his bestseller The Rise of the Fourth Reich. He uses his factual research into the Nazis’ fascination with the occult and their search for iconic treasures as a basis for this novel.

Can Giselle Tchaikovsky, a young American woman who achieved fame as a teenage ballet dancer in the 1930s, stop Hitler’s dream of world conquest? Can the secret sisterhood she creates do anything against the Nazi juggernaut of men and machines? Will the sisterhood bring about a resurgence of the feminine goddess aspect of humanity in time to spare the world this madman’s holocaust?

Jim Marrs presents an edgy combination of fact and fiction in this widereaching story of ancient secrets uncovered in the midst of war. It’s a tale of love and war, ancient mysteries, and the struggle to balance the human soul.

The first novel from Marrs, this book follows his New York Times bestseller The Rise of the Fourth Reich. He uses his factual research into the Nazis’ fascination with the occult and their search for iconic treasures as a basis for the novel.

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