the snake stone jason goodwin
First heard of this guy because in Npr they reviewed a cookbook released of Turkish recipes by the author as though written by the character in his 19th century historic mystery novels.
The Snake Stone is the second in a series of detective novels by Jason Goodwin, featuring the eunuch Yashim. It is set in Constantinople / Istanbul in 1838. The library didn't have the first in the series so I jumped in on#2 not an issue.
I do enjoy historical fiction.
Having been to Istanbul made the book more lively and tangible for me ; though I felt I had missed out somewhat not eating more by street food vendors - a caution always taken when traveling with a family group of eight, particularly with the odd digestive system I've inherited.
NYT makes the comparison to another. favored author "The obvious and flattering point of comparison is Arturo PĂ©rez-Reverte’s Captain Alatriste novels, which dashingly incorporate 17th-century Spanish political machinations into the adventures of their dauntless hero. If Yashim’s era is a time of less swordplay, it is no less fraught with intrigue."
I quickly finished this novel, went back to the library , checked out another, out of sequence book entitled "An Evil Eye" and am devouring it.
A couple interesting side bars on 'new names' whispered to a child at birth, and 'how to shed your regrets and how to master your memories so you can hold yourself together as a man - living without bitterness and remorse.' Not truly inspirational stuff but well crafted and engaging narrative.
First heard of this guy because in Npr they reviewed a cookbook released of Turkish recipes by the author as though written by the character in his 19th century historic mystery novels.
The Snake Stone is the second in a series of detective novels by Jason Goodwin, featuring the eunuch Yashim. It is set in Constantinople / Istanbul in 1838. The library didn't have the first in the series so I jumped in on#2 not an issue.
I do enjoy historical fiction.
Having been to Istanbul made the book more lively and tangible for me ; though I felt I had missed out somewhat not eating more by street food vendors - a caution always taken when traveling with a family group of eight, particularly with the odd digestive system I've inherited.
NYT makes the comparison to another. favored author "The obvious and flattering point of comparison is Arturo PĂ©rez-Reverte’s Captain Alatriste novels, which dashingly incorporate 17th-century Spanish political machinations into the adventures of their dauntless hero. If Yashim’s era is a time of less swordplay, it is no less fraught with intrigue."
I quickly finished this novel, went back to the library , checked out another, out of sequence book entitled "An Evil Eye" and am devouring it.
A couple interesting side bars on 'new names' whispered to a child at birth, and 'how to shed your regrets and how to master your memories so you can hold yourself together as a man - living without bitterness and remorse.' Not truly inspirational stuff but well crafted and engaging narrative.