PRO CONNECT
Florence Charvin
Jane Barr, is a multifaceted professional with a rich tapestry of experiences spanning writing, librarianship, culinary arts, and mentorship. With a passion for storytelling and a keen eye for detail, Jane has made significant contributions as a writer and librarian, fostering a love of literature and learning in her community.
Beyond professional endeavours she embraces her role as a mother and a grandmother, cherishing her time spent with hr family, friends and the wider community. She is a bookshop and library junkie and she is also an avid champagne lover. Jane loves her home and renewing its look using a modest budget to reflect her literary tastes. Her garden has been created so that it is parklike with a number of tall trees and hedges.
Jane has a special interest in skincare, makeup, fashion, jewellery and fragrance.
“World, by Jane Barr
A lovingly researched tale whose rich setting and vivid scenery shine throughout.”
– Kirkus Reviews
Barr fictionalizes a historically significant stretch of time in the Persian Empire in this short historical novel.
In the author’s follow-up to Cocktails and Peacocks Feathers: An Anthology of Poetry (2024), readers are transported to 334 B.C.E. Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey). Barr’s young protagonist, Andronicus, is a Macedonian man of ambition who’s recently married a woman named Idahlia. Searching for more than the simple existence they were born into, Andronicus and Idahlia leave their old home behind and venture into war-torn Asia Minor, ruled at the time by the inimitable Alexander the Great, who’s busy marshalling his troops to ransack and conquer the Persians, whom he believes have gotten “too comfortable.” As Alexander moves, so, too, do Andronicus and Idahlia, along with their poet friend Leo. They settle for a time in Persepolis in 330 B.C.E., where the pair make ends meet with simple work and bartering. Meanwhile, readers are introduced to Roxane, the daughter of Baron and Leila Oxyartes, the former a powerful authority in the region. Still just a child, Roxane fusses in the ceremonial wedding dress she’s forced to wear to marry her half brother, Shapur: “The old blue dress is itchy and Roxane imagines the tiny creatures that nibble away on its fabric, the same creatures that feast on her mother’s silk dresses that hang like faded flowers on the lichen-encrusted walls of their hut.” Such is the existence Roxane leads in Sogdia, a place where such weddings of convenience are commonplace. Things are not much better for Andronicus and Idahlia. Just as the couple’s hardscrabble existence finally begins to seem untenable, fate draws them toward a meeting with Roxane that will alter the course of their lives.
While Barr’s novel is sometimes more of a meandering period piece than a propulsive narrative, readers can easily forgive such lapses; on the whole, the author’s research and authority over the subject matter are impressive. Barr’s richly ambient descriptions and vivid landscapes transport readers to the harsh climes of these ancient Persian lands. This is no small feat, since the novel is set in a time so long past that conjuring it requires some truly imaginative flourishes in the prose, which Barr renders in often simple but delicately chosen details: “The cave they have chosen has been made welcoming. The brazier is Bah’s. It is fine, tall and highly polished, and its light is soft. The best carpets and furs have been laid around the cave’s interior. Roxane finds the basket. It is tall and of fine weave and inside are the fragrant oranges eaten only on special occasions.” True, readers may not find the sort of unforgettable characters who are often prized in historical fiction set in ancient times (Andronicus, while an apt narrator, is not especially striking), but Barr’s text is just short enough that the characters are able to carry the weight of the narrative through to the final pages.
A lovingly researched tale whose rich setting and vivid scenery shine throughout.
Pub Date: May 13, 2025
ISBN: 9780473742614
Page count: 288pp
Publisher: Self
Review Posted Online: April 18, 2026
Day job
Writer
Favorite author
Geeraldine Brooks
Favorite book
People of the Book
Favorite line from a book
"A book is more than the sum of its materials. It is an artifact of the human mind and hand." People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks
Favorite word
Susurrus
Hometown
Napier
Passion in life
Writing and Reading and Sleeping
Unexpected skill or talent
I can do the splitz still at 64 years of age
WORLD: Global book awards, 2025
© Copyright 2026 Kirkus Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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