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C. L. Nightjar

Reviewed on Aug 14, 2021

Must read 🏆

Magic and mayhem in the ancient Middle East. A work of true scholarship and inspiration.

Synopsis

Winner of the 2021 Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Award for 'Best Historical'.

Set against a background of the Jewish Revolt against Rome of 66-70CE, this historical fiction novel tells the story of Sophia, a Babylonian Jew who learns ancient languages at the royal archives of the Parthians and secretly studies the magic on cuneiform tablets. She runs away from home, joining a Nabataean incense caravan, studies with the Essenes on the Dead Sea and joins with the militants of Qumran. As the Zealots battle to defend Jerusalem against Titus, she falls in love with a Greek freedman, Athanasios, a comrade in arms. Jews and Christians briefly unite with Samaritans and the People of the Land. But revolutionary Jerusalem is not the paradise of which they had dreamed, and messiahs may prove false.
After the devastating defeat, Sophia flees to Alexandria, where she founds an academy for women scholars. These are her memoirs, addressed to her ‘disciples’, to whom she recounts her experiences, expounds her ‘wisdom’ and details her magical recipes.

The novel reflects meticulous research on early Christianity, ‘Second Temple’ Jewish history and the history of magic, also weaving in fanciful material from Christian and Jewish lore.

“Sisters of Alexandria, you have requested an account of my years in Palestine…” So begins The Lost Wisdom of the Magi, immediately engaging the reader and setting the mood with the historic-styled prose. What follows is the life history of the protagonist, Sophia Zealotes, narrated as an old woman to her disciples.


The flashback opens in Babylon of Biblical times where we meet young Sophia and her Jewish family. Her father is an archivist for the gentile rulers, and Sophia aspires to follow in his bookish footsteps, shunning the servile duties expected of her as a female. For years her father indulges her flouting of convention, allowing her to accompany him to the archives where she buries herself in studies, particularly of ancient languages and magic. When her disapproving relatives arrange her betrothal and her younger brother’s apprenticeship at the archive, Sophia flees the city, absconding with a mysterious tablet that she discovered in the archive. Carved in the stone fragment are glyphs; the few that she has deciphered hint at a powerful magic it holds.


We follow Sophia through her journeys over the next several years, from her travels with an Arab trading caravan, to her life in a scholarly Jewish wilderness settlement, to her turn as a Zealot in Jerusalem, supporting the revolt against Rome. The settings are drawn to perfection, calling forth the scent of spices and incense in markets, the solemnity of ancient scrolls, and the chaos of city streets teeming with veiled women, slaves, prophets, traitorous merchants, and soldiers of all ilk.


The author’s passion for the subject matter is evident, but don’t be misled by the bounty of scrupulously researched historical details --- this is more than a joyous anthropologic treatise. Woven into the ancient setting is a compelling tale of female empowerment, rendered believable by the attention given to the protagonist’s character arc. The passages about Sophia’s youth show us how, in a society in which females are relegated to a lesser status, she develops the qualities and skills (intelligence, curiosity, stubbornness, knowledge of languages, healing, archiving, magic, and shapeshifting) that allow her to not only fend for herself, but to pursue a dangerous quest, even as she contends with a troubled, unsanctioned love.


The description of the setting, events, peoples, and philosophical/spiritual ideas sets a high bar, leading to what, by contrast, feels like an undeveloped opportunity in the story. The human characters seem almost summarized or lost in the richly depicted settings. There are many named characters and few descriptions of them --- physical appearance, age, facial expressions, tone of voice, etc. I found myself wanting more “live action” scenes and dialogue that would lend a sense of immediacy and connection to the characters.

All in all, this minor point does not detract the book’s timeless story of human conflict, both in the struggle against the tyranny of those in power, to the animosity and infighting that divide peoples of the same cultural background --- a theme that acutely resonates in our world today.


Reviewed by

Escape into history with tales of troubled heroes whose swords swing weightily along their thigh, and fair maidens who are a petticoat’s toss away from having their willful curiosity bluntly redressed. Costume creator C.L. Nightjar is a fan of historical erotica, hiking, and collecting puns.

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