by Ken Follett ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 18, 2012
An entertaining historical soap opera.
Follett continues the trilogy begun with Fall of Giants (2010) with a novel that ranges across continents and family trees.
It makes sense that Follett would open with an impending clash, since, after all, it’s Germany in 1933, when people are screaming about why the economy is so bad and why there are so many foreigners on the nation’s streets. The clash in question, though, is a squabble between journalist Maud von Ulrich, née Lady Maud Fitzherbert—no thinking of Brigitte Jones here—and hubby Walter, a parliamentarian headed for stormy times. Follett’s big project, it seems, is to reduce the bloody 20th century to a family saga worthy of a James Michener, and, if the writing is less fluent than that master’s, he succeeds. Scrupulous in giving characters major and minor plenty of room to roam on the stage, Follett extends the genealogy of the families introduced in the first volume, taking into account the twists and turns of history: If Grigori Peshkov was a hero of the Bolshevik Revolution, his son Volodya is a dutiful soldier of the Stalin regime—dutiful, but not slavishly loyal. Indeed, most of the progeny here spend at least some of the time correcting the mistakes of their parents’ generation: Carla von Ulrich becomes a homegrown freedom fighter in Germany, which will have cliffhanger-ish implications at the very end of this installment, while Lloyd Williams, son of a parliamentarian across the Channel, struggles against both fascism and communism on the front in the Spanish Civil War. (Lloyd’s a perspicacious chap; after all, even George Orwell needed time and distance from the war to gain that perspective.) Aside from too-frequent, intrusive moments of fourth-wall-breaking didacticism—“Supplying weaponry was the main role played by the British in the French resistance”—Follett’s storytelling is unobtrusive and workmanlike, and he spins a reasonable and readable yarn that embraces dozens of characters and plenty of Big Picture history, with real historical figures bowing in now and then. Will one of them be Checkers, Richard Nixon’s dog, in volume 3? Stay tuned.
An entertaining historical soap opera.Pub Date: Sept. 18, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-525-95292-3
Page Count: 960
Publisher: Dutton
Review Posted Online: July 30, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2012
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by Jason Goodwin ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 2007
A mildly entertaining smoke-and-mirrors tale that teases more than it delivers.
A leisurely mystery set in 19th-century Istanbul, the second in a series which began with The Janissary Tree (2006), winner of the 2007 Edgar Award.
Providing continuity is Yashim, the eunuch and investigator who worked for the sultan. Now it’s two years later, 1838, the sultan is dying, and Yashim has less clout, though he’s still a confidant of the Queen Mother. The story starts with a bang when George, a Greek, is almost killed next to his vegetable stall. We’ll find out much later that his misadventure is merely a red herring. Someone of more consequence is Max Lefèvre, a shady French archaeologist with a passion for Greek antiquities described in a book he hides in Yashim’s apartment. Lefèvre is being pursued and begs Yashim for help; the eunuch gets him a berth on an Italian vessel, but next thing you know Lefèvre is found dead, his face eaten away by dogs, outside the French embassy, and Yashim finds himself under suspicion. Who was pursuing the Frenchman? Could it have been the Hetira, a super-secret organization pushing for a new Greek empire? Its name keeps cropping up, then fades away in a story that proceeds by fits and starts. There are more puzzling murders (an Albanian waterman, a Jewish moneylender) but they’re over in seconds, leaving plenty of time for Yashim to indulge his first love, cooking, and Goodwin, a British historian, to fill us in on Istanbul’s fabled past and exotic present. The large cast includes a Greek banking family and the English doctor who attended Byron at Missilonghi. Nobody is quite who they seem, there may or may not be valuable relics above ground or below (there are two scenes in Istanbul’s maze of tunnels), and through it all glides Yashim, a gentle presence, who will fight only when he must.
A mildly entertaining smoke-and-mirrors tale that teases more than it delivers.Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2007
ISBN: 978-0-374-29935-4
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Sarah Crichton/Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2007
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by Judith Tarr ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 1995
The Holy Roman Empire is the setting for another historical romance from Tarr (Throne of Isis, 1994, etc.), this one focusing on the Byzantine princess who ruled the empire from 983994 as regent for her son, Otto III. Theophano, daughter of the Byzantine Emperor, doesn't seem to have much of a future: Her father murdered, her mother set aside by the new emperor, the best she might hope for is a quiet life in a convent. So when ambassadors arrive from the west, seeking a wife for the heir to the Holy Roman Empire, Theophano sees her escape. Accompanied by Aspasia—her aunt, mentor, advisor—she leaves Constantinople for Rome and weds Otto II. Meanwhile, Theophano's training as a queen, her mother-in-law troubles, and peregrinations around the Empire are chronicled by Aspasia, who describes herself as plain but seems regularly to draw the attention of men—among them Moorish physician Ismail, who becomes her clandestine lover, a dangerous alliance in a Christian empire. As Otto's rule is threatened by his cousin Henry the Quarreller, Theophano's power increases: Her mother-in-law is banished for supporting Henry's claim to the throne, and Theophano is entrusted with Otto's heir, Otto III, and with the court. Then, after word comes that Otto is dead in Rome, three-year-old Otto III becomes emperor, and the battle for his regency ensues. It's awarded to Theophano, and Henry responds by laying siege to Cologne and kidnapping the child- emperor from Aspasia and Ismail. The race to line up military and ecclesiastical support for Theophano is punctuated with theological musings by Aspasia—but the peace that she brokers between Henry and Theophano is more successful than any she'll find between her culture and her lover's. A strangely stolid tale, relieved by attention to cultural detail and rescued by the fictional characters. (2 maps, not seen)
Pub Date: April 1, 1995
ISBN: 0-312-85819-1
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Forge
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1995
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