Книга The Keyholder S. Kallistos

The Keyholder

A Novel of Byzantine Constantinople

Автор: S. Kallistos
Език: Английски език
Корици: С меки корици
Издател: Independently published
Наличност: Външен склад
Изпращаме след 10-18 дни
15.63 30.57 лв
Constantinople, 843 AD. The Iconoclasm is over. The icons have been restored, the Empress Theodora r...

Информация за книгата

Автор
Език
Английски език
Корици
Книга - С меки корици
Издадена
2026
страници
280
EAN
9798252866413
Enbook ID
52753314
Издател
Теглоt
343
Размери
152 x 229 x 18

Пълно описание

Constantinople, 843 AD. The Iconoclasm is over. The icons have been restored, the Empress Theodora rules as regent, and the empire breathes again. But beneath the surface of triumph, the palace keeps its secrets - and its dead.

When a minor secretary is found dead in the Sacred Palace - his hands bound, his death announced as suicide - Theophano Doukena, a young widow serving as Lady of Honour, begins to ask questions no one wants answered. What she uncovers is not a single murder but a chain of silence stretching back years: a secret brotherhood guarding the empire's darkest truths, a husband whose death on the frontier was no accident, and a conspiracy that reaches higher than she ever imagined - to the throne itself.

As Theophano follows the trail from coded ledgers to hidden archives, from moonlit gardens to the corridors of power, she finds herself drawn into a dangerous alliance with the one person she should not trust: the Empress herself. What begins as investigation becomes something far more complex - a bond between two women that defies the rules of the palace and the limits of forgiveness.

But in Constantinople, knowledge is the most dangerous weapon. And when those who hold power decide that silence must be enforced at any cost, Theophano must choose: protect what she loves, or expose the truth that could bring down an empire.

The Keyholder is a literary historical novel of intrigue, love, and moral complexity, set in the golden age of Byzantium. For readers of Umberto Eco, Hilary Mantel, and Madeline Miller.