Fortune’s
Child:
A
Novel of Empress Theodora
By
James Conroyd Martin
From a very young age, Theodora, daughter of a circus bearkeeper in
Constantinople, sets her sights well above her station in life. Her exquisite
beauty sets her apart on stages and in the eyes of men.
Stephen, a Syrian lad of striking good looks, is sold by his parents to a Persian wizard, who teaches him a skill in languages that will serve him well.
By the time Destiny brings them together in Antioch, Theodora has undergone heart-rending trials and a transformation, while Stephen has been sold again . . . and castrated.
Discover the enduring bond that, however imperfect, prompts Theodora—as Empress—to request palace eunuch Stephen to write her biography.
“But to take revenge
on a dying woman—an empress forged in steel, nonetheless—would demand cold
determination and a cunning mind. I vow to meet the challenge.”
For five long years,
Stephen has suffered the indignity and inhumanity of a cold, damp prison cell.
When they come for him, he fears the worst. But instead of death, he is given
an audience with the woman who had sealed his fate all those years ago.
How can Empress
Theodora ask this of him? After everything, she has done. And yet, Stephen is
the only person she can trust to write her official biography. How Stephen
would like to throw Theodora’s offer in her face, but he has already lost five
years of his life, he does not want to lose anymore.
But as Theodora
begins to recite the story that she wants him to tell, Stephen cannot help but
remember his own dark and sordid journey from a young Syrian boy to a palace
eunuch.
From the abject
terror of a key turning in a dungeon door to the remembered past of a life once
lived, Fortune’s Child: A Novel of Empress Theodora by James Conroyd Martin, is
the compelling account of the rise to power of Theodora and the man who loved
her from afar.
With crystalline
prose, Martin has written a book that horrifies, fascinates, and moves in
almost equal measures. The life of Empress Theodora is one of debauchery and
passionate interludes. It is also the story of a woman who escaped the poverty of
her birth and rose in station so high it surpassed all expectation. Theodora is an
actress, a whore, a mother, a mistress, a wife, and finally an empress. Martin
has brought Theodora vividly back to life in the pages of this remarkable book.
With a keen eye on
the historical controversy, Martin has presented his readers with a book that
is backed by confident research, and his almost lyrical narrative made
Fortune’s Child next to impossible to put down. The hours of research that
Martin has dedicated to the life of Theodora has to be commended. Martin
presents his readers with a woman who is intelligent, sensual, and determined.
Theodora's story is quite extraordinary and, as is suggested in this book, her
character has been cruelly assassinated by those who loathed her power and
position. Martin has decided to base his Theodora not on the seemingly bitter,
or perhaps self-seeking exaggerations of Procopius of Caesarea, but on his own
understanding of her character. However, Martin does not give his readers a Theodora
without the controversy, but he does allow his readers to glimpse or more
balanced view of her. I thought his depiction was particularly well-drawn, and
more importantly, believable. Fortune’s Child is indeed a dazzling portrait and
a gripping account of Theodora’s life and that of the Byzantine Empire during
this time.
Fortune’s Child is
the story of Theodora’s rise to power, but it is also the gripping, yet
haunting tale of the former Secretary to the Empress — Stephen. Stephen’s story
is unforgettably tragic. His hopes, his dreams, his desires are stolen from him
as surely as his freedom was. Stephen suffers terribly in this book, and at
times, the things he is made to endure left me in tears. His story is one of
survival, and what a story it is. Stephen is betrayed at first because of his
family's poverty, and then by Theodora, whom he adored and trusted. His story
is genuinely heart-rendering, and I think it is one that will haunt me for a
long time.
Martin writes with a
great deal of authority, but he also has a keen eye on human fragility and
frailty. His characters are flawed, but not ridiculously so. They come across
as very authentic and real in the telling. Martin also writes with a great deal
of imagination and a seemingly inexhaustible supply of energy, which not only
made this book incredibly gripping but also vastly entertaining. Martin has a
novelist intuition for what makes a book immensely readable as well as creating
characters that a reader can really get behind. When historical fiction is
written in such a way, there is no such thing as too much.
Fortune’s Child: A
Novel of Empress Theodora is a book that is compelling, engaging, and utterly
engrossing. It is a book where history comes alive. This is a book worthy of
your time and deserving of a place on your bookcase.
If you are looking
for your next great Historical Fiction read, then look no further than
Fortune’s Child: A Novel of Empress Theodora by James Conroyd Martin. I, for
one, cannot wait to read the next book in what promises to be the next great
series.
I Highly Recommend.
Review by Mary Anne
Yarde.
The Coffee Pot Book
Club.
Pick up your copy of
Fortune’s Child
James Conroyd Martin
Ah, Fate~
The seed for "Fortune's Child" started some years ago when I was taking an Art Appreciation course at a community college in Los Angeles. One day we were studying the exquisite mosaics of Emperor Justinian and Empress Theodora from the Basilica di San Vitale in Ravenna, Italy, and the professor pointed to Theodora and said, “I’m not a writer, but if I were, that is the woman I would write about.”
Little did he know what he had unloosed.
What a fascinating woman, frailties and all! She could have been the prototype for Eva Peron. I started the novel right then and there; however, life and other books got in the way.
But Fortune's Child has finally found her way.
Fate goes ever as it must.
I am also the author of THE POLAND TRILOGY, beginning with "Push Not the River," a novel based on the diary of Anna Berezowska, a Polish countess who lived through the rise and fall of the Third of May Constitution. After working on the project for some years without raising interest within the publishing community, I self-published in 2001. Just one year later, St. Martin’s Press purchased the book and released a hard cover edition in September 2003. Polish and German rights sold almost immediately.
The Polish edition, "Nie ponaglaj rzeki," was released in May of 2005, became a bestseller and sold out in a matter of months. Anna's story had come full circle: Polish to English to Polish! "Pod purpurowym niebem," the translation of "Against a Crimson Sky," also became a bestseller when published in December of 2007.
"The Warsaw Conspiracy" followed, as did "The Boy Who Wanted Wings."
Martin, who holds degrees from St. Ambrose and DePaul Universities, is a retired English and Creative Writing teacher now living and writing in Portland, Oregon.
Connect with James: Website • Twitter • Goodreads.
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx