Secrets and Lies

The LePage Legacy

by Firth Bowser Ayotte


Formats

Softcover
$40.80
Softcover
$40.80

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/17/2010

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 720
ISBN : 9781426909634

About the Book

After spending thirteen years of research, the findings of this massive undertaking was therefore put into book form thusly allowing the facts to speak for itself. While attempting to track down the oral history of the LePage family living here in the Western Hemisphere, startling facts were being unearthed as most of the documented information didn't coincide with what was being passed down from generation to generation. The deeper the curious onlooker dug into his ancestral past, the more puzzling things became as the long forgotten historical facts were constantly being manipulated by card carrying members of the LePage family tree. Coupled with the outrageous deed of distorting the truth, numerous members of this French Roman Catholic surname were not only active participants but also freelance writers for the governing powers that be during the formative years of both Canada and the United States. With full disclosure being the driving force behind the book's written words, the secret world of North American Freemasonry helps shed new light on a well hidden political agenda based on religious ideologies for we, the people living in the western-free world. Being the by-product of an egocentric environment, the book itself simplifies a very complex web of family history embroiled in conspiracy, betrayal, and corruption.


About the Author

Born and raised in a small farming community in Canada's only bilingual province, his parents and siblings migrated to Gibsons, British Columbia in October of 1967 when he was just a lad. As a seventh grade student attending Gibsons Elementary School, the young 13-year-old New Brunswick herron-ch was completely overwhelmed with joy at the very idea of no longer being forced to wake-up at the crack of dawn to milk cows. Now being allowed the privilege of sleeping-in, Benoit LePage looked forward at the prospects of enjoying he newfound freedom in English Canada.