After centuries of power and tyranny, the Byzantine Empire is falling. Fierce Turkish armies attack the empire's borders from without; treacherous aristocratic intrigues attack its heart from within. Young Leo Ducas, heir to a noble family, goes to battle to serve his emperor and his God. But even on the battlefield, Leo's worst enemies are not the Turks, but his own treasonous kinsmen. Shattered and scarred, Leo returns to Byzantium in disgrace. There he finds only dissension and madness. His cousins are in exile, his parents dishonored. When the holiest of churches proves no sanctuary against the evil magics that brought down an emperor, Leo flees to the borders of the empire. On the caravan routes and in the crude hermitages, Leo sees wonders and magics that no Christian man has a right to behold. Among the ruins of empires older than Byzantium, he encounters plots and conspiracies even more insidious than those he has fought before ... and finds a beautiful Jewess who may hold the key that will unite all the peoples of Asia Minor.
No one betrays you as thoroughly as your dearest friends.
Excellent historical fiction, quarter turn from real toward fantastic. Schwartz confronts Christian, Jewish, and Islamic characters with a region gestating older faith elements, in the historic and geographic confines of eleventh century Anatolia, then adds just enough supernatural to trigger awe and fear. Battle of Manzikert and Turkish invasion of Anatolia background.
He felt the sob that racked her—just one; and she put on her self-control like a veil.
Characters resonate. The names of many characters rersonate. Each has personal, religious, and community issues which push them toward or away from themselves. Refreshing main characters experience crises of faith trying to hold to their faith.
You had to keep your hand on your purse and your mind on the soundness of your doctrine, or the markets of Byzantium would strip you of money and soul alike.
Quibble: Coincidences are the mother’s milk of fiction, but these are ridiculous—unless you accept them as part of the supernatural element of the story. meets the same Jewish family in widely spread locations in Anatolia in a couple years span.
He knew he was going to die. He had never felt more alive.
This novel is bolstered by some obviously thorough research, and benefits from being set in a period not overly-trodden by modern authors (the fascinating, little known later Byzantine period, just before the Crusades). It also mixes its history and fantasy concepts in an interesting fashion. However, it's marred by some bizarre (and jarring) narrative jumps and recursions that made it quite hard to read at times.
The mixture of historical fiction and fantasy in this tale felt a bit disjointed to me. There is the gritty story of war in the near east which is based on history, along with the religious tensions of the times. As if that was not enough to deal with, the author brings in a werewolf, a few people who see visions of the future, a woman and her father who can use magic and a thousand-years-old secret hidden in underground caves. The story seemed to want to be two separate stories melded together in a haphazard way.
I was drawn in to buy this book by the beautiful cover, but did not regret it once I started reading. The setting is the mid Byzantine Empire, around the time of the disastrous Battle of Manzikert. Perhaps most readers will not be too familiar with the era and location, despite it's importance to the history of the rest of the western world. The story is beautiful, if dense and slow paced. I loved the book.
Really hard read and hard to follow - ended up skimming the second half of the book. Plot is good and interesting but I don't like books that I have to concentrate too hard to understand.
Thoroughly enjoyed this book. Well thought-through story with good historical 'grist'. One of those 'couldn't put it down' books - and there's few enough of them!