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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a haunting story of love and betrayal
This is an intricate story of love on many different levels. Set in New York and Vietnam in the 1960's, the story revolves around two friends who grew up together and took very different paths in life. The characters are wrapped in webs of love; romantic love, love for friends, love for God, love for the church, love for their country. One by one each of these strands...
Published on July 30, 1998

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6 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Cross Purposes
I read this on recommendation of a friend who was mostly interested in the research concerning the Catholic Church's involvment in the Vietnam War. It did encourage me to look up information in the FBI files on Cardinal Spellman. There was much that bothered me in the book. I was never a priest but went to Catholic School and became friends with many priests, even close...
Published on March 23, 2002 by W. Jamison


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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a haunting story of love and betrayal, July 30, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
This is an intricate story of love on many different levels. Set in New York and Vietnam in the 1960's, the story revolves around two friends who grew up together and took very different paths in life. The characters are wrapped in webs of love; romantic love, love for friends, love for God, love for the church, love for their country. One by one each of these strands starts to unwind. I think this is what gripped me...how far can the love be stretched...how much betrayal can love withstand? I have been haunted by the ending of the book, wondering if it is believable. It leaves the reader examining their own presuppositions about the endurability of love and the meaning of forgiveness. I would highly recommend it.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vietnam Redemption, November 14, 2002
By 
Jim Knowles-Tuell (Columbia, MD United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
As a baby-boomer, anti-Vietnam protester, and clergy (Methodist, not Catholic), this book grabbed me where I live. While there is a culture in the Catholic Church that I will never know, the struggles with hierarchy, obedience, and the confusion of secular, political ends with spiritual "correctness" will be familiar to all who serve or served in ministry while disagreeing with our government about Vietnam. Overlaying this is the tension of the whole obedience to a sacred vow of celibacy versus true romantic love and the jealousy that such love creates between friends. The resolution of these tensions is a powerful image of redemption - both personally, politically and spiritually.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Vietnam War and the Catholic Peace Movement, July 11, 2004
By 
Arlene Eisenberg (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
I was awed by this novel. It is not a fast read, but a most satisfying one. With a great deal of historic detail, Carroll draws from his own experience as a priest during the Vietnam era, and the conflicts he confronted. This book is a "must read" part of Vietnam era literature, along with The Quiet American by Graham Greene. These were complicated times, the country was divided, and it wasn't until the Mai Lai massacre story was revealed that most U.S. citizens realized that our soldiers were capable of, and ordered to by their superiors, commit mass murder of unarmed civilians.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Loved 90% - Hated 10%, August 26, 2009
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
Warning, this review contains spoilers but I don't know how to express my reaction without them!

Frank and Michael grew up together in New York City just down the hill from The Cloisters. As boys they would often go to The Cloisters to sit in the garden, smoke cigarettes, and discuss life. They were altar boys together and their growing up, in the 1940s was as naive and as Catholic as my own life was a decade later.


Michael served in Korea where he was a hero and spent 3 years as a POW. When he returns to America he decides to enter the seminary. Frank is an aspiring poet, aspiring beatnik, and ultimately winds up teaching at Fordham, the Jesuit university in New York. Carroll is a masterful writer and, though he spent a lot of time describing the era, the politics, the settings, it was done so well and the story was so compelling that reading it was sheer joy.


As a young deacon, a year away from ordination, Michael meets the very beautiful and feisty Sister Anne Edwards and, because of her passionate commitment to trying to save the school she teaches at, he has his first taste of political activism but things do not go well. In the fallout he introduces Sister Ann to Frank, returns to the seminary, she leaves the convent and goes back to being Carolyn. She has fallen in love with Michael but, because he is unavailable, marries Frank. This was a bit of a stretch for me but, okay, I'll bite, what's up with this?


But, of course, it doesn't matter because the rest of the book is about Father Michael Maguire --- it is about the politics leading up to the war in Vietnam and Michael's efforts to save the children being wounded in the war, and then his fight to stop the war, and then his life as a fugitive and an activist, and a hero to the millions who support his cause. Now, at that period of time, when I was in high school, college, and beyond, the war against the war in Vietnam was very much a part of my life. I was fascinated by and hero-worshipped the resistance. I loved Abby Hoffman. I loved Tom Hayden. And I especially loved the Berrigans, Daniel and Philip, two brother priests whom I found the most incredible people of the era. So reading about Father Michael Maguire was a delicious treat. The character of Michael seemed very close to Fr. Philip Berrigan in places but also to all the resistance-priests who became politically active. It was a volatile time for Catholics not just because of the war but also because our Church was changing thanks to Pope John XXIII's Vatican II Council.


So, here I am thoroughly engrossed in the story. Throughout Michael's most intense period of activism, during his trial for destruction of Federal Property, and then while he is living underground, he is very much supported by Frank and Carolyn. They love him and admire his work and, when he jumps bail rather than go to prison, they are the ones who forfeit the $20K bail they posted. But it is worth it because they believe in him and what he stands for. This is the story of an incredible, brave, heroic, magnificent warrior-hero priest but it is set against the background of my life. I couldn't turn the pages fast enough and then --- BLAM!


Okay, SPOILER ALERT. If you plan to read the book you might want to quit here. I almost wish I had quit there. We come to find out that Fr. Michael has been having an affair his best friend's wife for the past several years and, when Frank finds out, he is so stung by their betrayal he in turn betrays his lifelong friend, the FBI picks him up, and off to prison he goes.


Now, I'm not going to argue the likelihood or the morality of this. It is what it is and I am a firm believer that a storyteller can tell his story anyway he wants to but... this is the 10% I hate: once again it is the immoral, conscienceless, greediness of a woman that destroys a magnificent man. I mean, come on! Was that necessary? Eve offers the apple and Adam says, "I couldn't help it, Frank, the woman gave it to me. Sorry if I betrayed our lifelong bond by banging your wife but she said she loved me."


Okay, I'm not crazy about a priest breaking his vows but it happens and I'm not crazy about him having an affair with a married woman because that happens too. But it is the blithe, cavalier way that Carolyn (a former nun) continues on in her married life (with his best friend) organizing fund-raisers for him, allowing her husband to support her (and in many ways him) all because she is just so beautiful and she loves him so much. It's such a cliché.


Yes, I know these things can happen but I resented her turning into such a dislikable, self-centered, immoral twit. Is that what the author really thinks of women? Couldn't he come up with something better than that? But, of course, the writer is male and the woman is just so doggone beautiful so who cares if she behaves like a selfish brat?


Sigh. The final scene of the book is just gorgeous, haunting, unforgettable. Much of the book is. But I wish the woman they both "loved" had been worthy of their love --- and of the author's respect.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Questioning Higher Authority, July 25, 2007
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
James Carroll has created a stimulating, ultimately uncomplicated story that resonates with those whose generation was permanently scarred by Viet Nam and unexpected lies from false leaders. The characters are not surprising, but Carroll's ability to bring them vividly to life is masterful. Unsuspecting idealists are disillusioned, not a surprise in the current generation of cynicism. But in the Kennedy era of hopes and dreams it came as a terrible blow. Institutions are villains and man is imperfect, not a new theme. But the way it is woven through the story shines light on the era in a compelling way. Prince of Peace is an inspiring book, despite the sadness of its story. I feel better off for having read it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Anything by James Carroll is good, October 30, 2009
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
Began reading and then got side tracked on to something else. Ever since he wrote "Constantine's Sword" I have been an avid reader of his works.
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6 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Cross Purposes, March 23, 2002
By 
W. Jamison "William S. Jamison" (Eagle River, Ak United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
I read this on recommendation of a friend who was mostly interested in the research concerning the Catholic Church's involvment in the Vietnam War. It did encourage me to look up information in the FBI files on Cardinal Spellman. There was much that bothered me in the book. I was never a priest but went to Catholic School and became friends with many priests, even close friends with several. The priests in the novel are nothing like those I knew. Neither were the nuns I knew anything like those in the book. What gives? Could there really be people like that with commitment enough to become priests or nuns? I suppose so. What with the recent issues concerning priests in the news, maybe Carroll is right. My feeling is the novel needed sex and cheap contemporary slang to connect the dots in his research. The research at least was interesting.
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9 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Potential social commentary gone awry., May 7, 2000
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This review is from: Prince of Peace (Paperback)
Try this on: Michael Maguire is a highly decorated Korean War veteran turned anti-Vietnam War Catholic priest. Frank Durkin, his best friend from childhood, is married to Carolyn Campbell, a former Catholic nun (Sister Anne Edward) who actually is in love with Michael. And, of course, Michael is in love with her.

Sound like your typical romance novel? It's not. This is the plot of James Carroll's novel "Prince of Peace," a book which purports to make a social commentary about "what divides American Catholicism." It could have done that successfully, except for three major flaws: first: the characters have no real depth; either they think, speak and act in ways that make them frequently come off more like caricatures in a parody than real characters in the human drama; second: The plot is so predictable that it borders on the cliché; and third: the author's visceral dislike for the Catholic Church (bordering on anti-catholic bigotry - certainly an unusual sentiment for a former Catholic priest) is very distracting.

Don't waste your time or money on this novel.

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