A good mystery writer broadens her horizons.
Anne Perry
The Sheen on the Silk
Random House 2010
Anne Perry, who has a well deserved reputation as a writer of murder mysteries set in Victorian London, has expanded her canvas to the time of the battle for control of Christian thought and practice between the Roman Catholic Church in Rome and the Eastern Orthodox Church in Constantinople in the late Thirteen Century.
The center of the action is Constantinople, but the larger stage also includes Rome, Venice, Jerusalem, the Sinai desert and Sicily. The characters are just as diversified, including rulers, Popes, merchants, soldiers and sailors. The players all have to be careful of both their words and deeds as the situation changes almost daily as a Roman Catholic Church threatens the Eastern Orthodox center of Constantinople, a city crusaders had ravaged 70 years earlier.
In the process, Ms Perry enlghtens her readers on the powers possessed by the ubiquitous eunuchs who operated in positions of real power unrealized and unreachable by most others, as bishops, physicians, and aides to political, religious and merchant leaders.
As a historian and an ordained minister in the Anglican Church in North America, I appreciate her attention to detail and her grasp of the complexities of bringing our religious convictions into a harmonious relationship with our all too human actions.
In a novel that keeps the reader turning the pages, she weaves a rich tapestry of love, hate, treachery, and a struggle for both religious and temporal power into a novel well worth the reading.
She fashions a powerful story of people who believe in themselves, their country and their religion so completely that they are driven to do things they would normally consider reprehensible. In this compelling drama we find people of faith on both sides of the struggle resorting to tactics which are forbidden by Christianity, yet convinced that the ends are justified by the means.
In doing so, Ms Perry has revealed to us more about what we are willing to do for our beliefs than most of us would be willing to confess. This is particulary considering what people of faith have done since the attacks of 9/11.
signed: The Rev. Robert V. Latour
326 Lindale
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.