The sub-genre of historical-fiction-mystery (and/or
thriller) can be a lot of fun if the author takes the time to study the
history. Lately, while waiting for favorite authors like Iain Pears and David
Liss (can you hear me, Neal Stephenson?) to publish something new, this
impatient reader has turned to less ambitious writers like John Maddox Roberts and Alan Furst, along with less-historically-meaty ones like Joseph Kanon and John Lawton.
Recently, a reference to the Time Odyssey trilogy of science-fiction novels by Arthur C. Clarke
and Stephen Baxter led me to re-read that series (2004-2008). I had mostly
forgotten the alternative history aspects, especially in the first of the
series, Time’s Eye. In that story, an
inscrutable alien race creates a new patchwork Earth in a parallel reality,
combining slices of the planet’s past and present into a crazy quilt. Pre-humans
rub elbows with ice age Neanderthals, Alexander the Great’s conquering army
moving down the Indus valley, Genghis Khan’s Mongol horde sweeping south, a British
Afghanistan outpost (complete with Rudyard Kipling) and the city of Chicago
(including Edison) from the late 19th-century, 21st-century UN
peacekeepers and a returning ISS crew. There’s not a lot of history beyond the
initial plot setup, but there are some interesting speculations on the
evolution of human thought and psychology.
Imagine my surprise when my next choice also invoked both Alexander and Genghis. For some time, Steve Berry’s
Cotton Malone Series had been on the
radar, and finally made it to the top of the reading list. The third novel in
the series, The Venetian Betrayal,
includes a fictional female megalomaniac who aspires to revive the lost Mongol
Empire of the Khans. At the same time, she imagines herself as a new,
benevolent Alexander, spreading the assumed unifying benefits of empire across
central Asia and the Middle East.
The Berry
novels present a new and interesting dilemma. On the one hand, as fiction they’re
pretty bad: cartoon villains, ludicrous plots and frequent horrific lapses in
basic grammar and syntax. Here’s one of my favorite lines: “Iran
is a harbinger of terrorists”. And the bad guys all carry “AK-74”s. I hope Berry
isn’t overpaying his editors.
The flipside, however, is that there’s a lot of interesting
history, in areas I haven’t explored much. The
Templar Legacy includes a history of that order of Crusader knights along
with the kind of hidden wealth-lost truths-secret society-world domination plot
made famous lately by Dan Brown. The
Alexandria Link speculates that maybe the famous Library of Alexandria wasn’t
destroyed after all. And The Venetian
Betrayal mixes in some interesting history of the renaissance-era Venetian
Republic, along with the
aforementioned Alexander and Genghis.
I’ll hold off on invoking the 5 criteria to rate this series
until after reading a couple more. I’m hoping the writing will get better,
while continuing to delve into interesting historical subjects.
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