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.
Under a dazzling tapestry of fully realized scenes recording the chaotic first century in the middle east, Suzie Helme weaves Sophia’s story, coming of age and gaining wisdom and compassion, reaching maturity and distributing her wisdom. Sophia tells her story to her sisters of Alexandria, providing an account of her years in Palestine. She promises to share what she knows about the Lost Wisdom and Magic.
Sophia is a Jew with a Greek name with little interest in girlish things. Under her father’s guidance she demonstrates a precocious interest and ability in studying scriptures and stories and finding revelations in a nearby cave. Relatives, especially an obnoxious uncle, demand that she find a husband and become a traditional Jewish wife. Improbably, she runs away and joins a caravan of traders where she learns their ways, becomes a storyteller and begins to practice her magic. She develops a deep relationship with a girl, Shu’dat, who befriends her . When Shu’dat marries they part, Shu’dat to love her husband, Sophia to pursue intellectual pursuits of language and wisdom. The refrain of Sophia’s grieving over having to make hard choices echoes through her story.
In following her search for knowledge, Sophia joins her peoples’ ill-fated revolt against Rome. Ultimately, she tells the story of her struggles and shares her hard-won wisdom with her sisters.
Every page of this book shows the painstaking and thorough research Helme has completed to immerse the reader headlong into the era described. This is both its brilliance and a disadvantage. I know that the fruits of an author’s research are fascinating to the researcher, and there is a tendency to overwhelm the story with detail. Sophia describes many characters from head to foot–from beads in the hair to the shape of sandals. Philosophers, religious leaders and obscure places are recalled. And there’s the magic. That frustrated my desire to move along to Sophia’s next adventure.
Yet, this is a fascinating book. Sophia is an admirable heroine who taught me well about a time and place I knew little about.
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