Author
Tracy Higley has created quite a thematic
series of romantic suspense stories based on ancient civilizations. She’s
published novels set in the Galilee of the early period of Herod the Great (39
B.C.), ancient Egypt (two books set in the time of the pharaohs), the Babylon
of Nebuchadnezzar, two in ancient Greece, two in Rome and one in Ephesus in the
early Christian period. Then she has the “Lost Cities” series – novels set in
Pompeii and Petra, and two in the “Babylon Chronicles.” And she has others.
Her
latest work in Awakening,
set in contemporary New York City and the Minoan civilization set on what we
know today as the Greek island of Santorini, the location of all the iconic
photographs of white houses and blue-domed roofs. In the distant past, a
volcano blew a considerable portion of the island away, leaving what is known
as the Caldera.
Kallista
Andreas, called Kallie, is a young woman without much of a past, or at least
much of a memory. Seven years earlier, she had been found in a New York City
museum devoted to Minoan artifacts, without a name, a memory or anything else.
She’d been taken under the wing of a museum director, trained in Minoan history
and research techniques, and gradually built a life for herself, but still with
a void of what happened before.
She’s
getting therapy in an effort to recover her memory, and her therapist suggests
she keep a journal. She begins to write a story set in the Minoan period, on
the island now called Santorini. She’s not sure where the ideas for the story
are coming from, but they are coming.
Santorini, overlooking the Caldera |
One
of the museum’s benefactors is a young man, Dimitri Andreas (not related to Kallie),
who’s inherited great wealth from his father. He hires Kallie to lead a team to
find an artifact that supposedly holds the translation key to the Linear A language, used by
the ancient Myceneans. If it does exist, it will move Minoan research and
scholarship into entirely new territory.
And
off the team goes to Egypt, Venice and finally Santorini, dogged by crooks,
thieves, and assorted villains. As the story progresses, the story of the
search becomes entwined with the story Kallie is writing in her journal.
If
all of this sounds somewhat improbable, it is – until you start reading the
story. Higley writes with a fast, engaging pace, pulling you into some unexpected
directions. After a while, though, you don’t care – you just want to find out what
happens next (and a lot keep happening next).
Awakening is a great
summer read.
Photograph: Wall painting of boxing boys
and antelopes, Akrotiri on Santorini, courtesy of Travel to Santorini. Photograph of Greek villas in Santorini courtesy of
Kenneth Diluigi at My Budget Travel.
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