Driven by his vision that he was the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. of the handicapped, he rushes relentless to his destiny of leading his people to freedom from the American Holocaust.
Attila's wealthy industrial magnate grandfather hates him because of his Hungarian Jewish mother and because he is the only deformed member of a vain elite family. He disowns Attila because of the publicized controversial civil disobedience activities the grandson leads. Attila publicly renounces his grandfather for being bigoted.
In love with Helen, Attila, nevertheless womanizes insatiably. Just when it appears that everything is in his favor, Attila is gunned down in a bloody hail of bullets by a crazed rival.
The reader is constantly bon-barded by relentless tidal waves of roller-coaster sexual excesses, the bitter depths of tragedy and sorrow, euphoria, opulence, gentle tenderness, bloody violence, hedonistic debauchery and profound social discourse and commentary and shocking is used that it is certain to trigger national controversy.