In November of 1833, the state of Missouri turned a blind eye as hundreds of its peaceful inhabitants were hunted down and driven from their homes in the dead of night.
Against this impending strife, a young man with a divine vision leads a people against the aggression of an anti-hero with a vulnerable past.
With more than two million copies sold, the second volume of Gerald N.
Lund's epic series The Work and the Glory now brings a pivotal moment in American history to the big screen.
"The Work and The Glory: American Zion" sets the story of the fictional Steed family against the historically factual backdrop of the Mormon people's move into the West.
Divided by their diverse reactions to a nascent ideology, the Steeds struggle to hold together as the strength of their convictions and their filial bonds are tested.
The stirring narrative of the faith that led a persecuted people to Missouri and beyond is one of the most poignant untold tales of American history.
It is the account of a valiant struggle to exercise the rights promised by a fledgling nation.
"The Work and the Glory: American Zion" unearths the story of the passion behind the movement which eventually launched the largest American migration and the colonization of the West: the vision of a promised land in America.