The king was going mad . . . So begins Polly Schoyer Brooks's account of
one of history's most compelling stories and one of the world's most
popular heroines-Joan of Arc. Brooks tells us of a fifteenth-century
France ravaged by war, plague, and religious conflict; of a king who
suffered fits of madness and his weak son who made a disappointing
successor; and of a peasant girl from the countryside who accomplished
what appeared to be miracles by rallying the dispirited French nation
with her desire to see the rightful king rule. Little more than a year
after her astounding triumphs-uniting the nation and securing the throne
for Charles VII with her victory over the English at
Orlean-nineteen-year-old Joan was imprisoned on charges of witchcraft
and sorcery, tried for heresy, and burned at the stake. Polly Schoyer
Brooks's detailed narrative unveils the spirited young woman who became
a patron saint and continues to inspire courage and faith.