By Jon Foyt
Why would an immigrant lad from off the docks of Liverpool, one Robert
Morris, pay for critical portions of the American Revolution out of his
own pocket, while helping found the first ever bank in the Colonies, and
then end up in debtor’s prison? Just ask his Bavarian talk therapist, a
surgeon in the Hessian Mercenary Army who gets into Morris’ complex
mind.
Jon Foyt’s 12th novel—heavily researched—uncovers the
inner motivations of this illegitimate and uneducated immigrant boy who
became one of our most unusual Founding Fathers. Relive his affairs, his
marriage, and his fortitude, he being only one of three men to sign all
vital Revolutionary documents: the Articles of Confederation, the
Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution.