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One more quick note ... I will be speaking to the Rancho Mirage Book Club at the Ranch Mirage Country Club on March 21 ... whahoo!
Here's the KIRKUS Review. "In The Shadow of Babylon"
An epoch-spanning thriller that’s part academic mystery and
part historical fantasy.
This time-traversing story opens in 11,000 B.C. with a
first-person tale rendered in high archaic fashion but with clear psychological
self-awareness. Ayuba, a clansman shepherd from a time just outside of recorded
history, relates the terrible destruction of his family and his herd. Ayuba’s
story continues throughout, but it is the discovery of this man’s poem (the
oldest writing in the world) that incites the events in 2004. Flashing forward 13,000
years to an Iraqi academic’s bedroom, the novel’s modern thriller-style plot
begins. Dr. Elman Darshi is trying to convince his wife that Saddam Hussein’s
Ba’athist agents are not in fact coming for them in the night. The sudden jump
in time and tone is remarkably compelling rather than jarring and gives this
novel its unique literary fascination. Ancient tablets containing the Song of
Ayuba lead to information that is not only threatening to Hussein’s small
empire of megalomania, but to established history and cultural orthodoxy. After
Darshi is eliminated for his years of research and toil, his daughter, Alex,
picks up the torch and reads the translation to the world on satellite
television. The song itself is yet another layer in the literary quality of the
novel and works as the novel’s philosophical centerpiece. The poem is lyrical,
mystical and shockingly secular—this in particular causes a great deal of
controversy once the poem is rendered for the Arabic-speaking world. Ayuba’s narrative
is essentially a fantastic hero story. After the dissolution of his people, he
travels into the Beyond relating his experiences and the strange encounters of
a world lost to history. Schwartz deftly weaves the romantic experiences of a
pre-historical shepherd into an extended homily that punctuates the trials of the Middle East as the contemporary
narrative plunges along in the best page-turner fashion. Not only linked well rhetorically,
the prose here is something to behold and is evocative without sacrificing
concision, an absolute demand of the thriller genre. Many readers will be
convinced that a literary discovery of this magnitude really might change the
course of contemporary politics, so confident and convincing is the vision of
the novel. A wonderfully written, provocative novel that utilizes two distinct
genres to promote progressive cultural messages.
Kirkus Indie,
Kirkus Media LLC, 6411 Burleson Rd., Austin, TX 78744
indie@kirkusreviews.
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