Michael W. Homer practices law in Salt Lake City. He is an award-winning author and has published numerous articles in the fields of law and Mormonism. He is the editor of On the Way to Somewhere Else: European Sojourners in the Mormon West, 1834-1930 (University of Utah Press, 2010).
"""An excellent piece of scholarship.... The comprehensive, descriptive nature of the text provides a solid starting point for future studies on the topic. For those interested in researching and writing about Freemasonry and Mormonism, Joseph's Temples will be the foundation for any serious inquiry for a long time to come.""--Utah Historical Quarterly ""Michael Homer's early articles basically created the new field of the global study of the interactions between Mormonism and Freemasonry. With this book, for many years in the making, we finally have the definitive treatment of this important and controversial issue."" --Massimo Introvigne, author of Les Mormons ""Takes a topic that has been the subject of endless fantasy and vituperation, and discusses it in a clear, sensible and scholarly way.""--www.patheos.com ""The definitive treatment by the acknowledged authority in this field--long awaited, and needed since the 1820s. Homer skips the nonsense but not the details in this masterful perspective on the many meanings of Masonry in the Mormon world."" --Rick Grunder, editor of Mormon Parallels: A Bibliographic Source ""The scholarship is perfect. The thousands of references in the footnotes, the wealth of data offered is often mind boggling: the book's thesis is buttressed by hundreds of primary sources. Because it is so well written with a clever sense of suspense and progression, the reader has the feeling that he is reading a detective story. Homer's style is limpid, didactical, and always understandable."" --Bernadette Rigal-Cellard, author of La Religion des Mormons ""The significance of Michael Homer's work cannot be overstated. He has accomplished what no other author has done on this topic. Mormon Studies has been waiting for a work like this."" --Michael G. Reed, author of Banishing the Cross: The Emergence of a Mormon Taboo ""This is a very important book. Homer has been working for many years on the impressive research underpinning Joseph's Temples, and has presented it in a careful restrained exposition. It will stand for decades as the essential guide to a hotly debated topic. ""--The Journal of Mormon History ""What makes this book particularly excellent is the care Homer takes in drawing together the intellectual and cultural traditions of Mormonism and Freemasonry to explain past and current trends in both organizations....You are missing an important contribution to the field of Mormon history if this book is not on your bookshelf.""--Association of Mormon Letters"