Translated by James Anderson, Publisher: Seagull Books, Price: INR 599-, pp 227, PB
THORVALD STEEN: The Invisible
LibraryTranslated by James
Anderson,Publisher: Seagull Books, Price: INR 599/-, pp – 227,
PB
The year is 323 BCE. King Alexander
of Macedonia—Alexander the Great—lies paralyzed by poison in his palace in
Babylon. He is thirty-two years old, had Aristotle as a mentor, and is the
greatest military commander the world has ever seen. At the other end of the
palace, Phyllis, a cook for Alexander’s army, sits locked in a room, arrested
on suspicion of being the poisoner. All of her adult life she has lived in the
field—and for a long period of time was Alexander’s lover. Who has poisoned the
king? Phyllis is allowed to live as long as she writes down everything she
knows about Alexander. She tells a brutal story of the violent daily life in
the war, about the planning of the expansion into the Arabian Peninsula, about
an invisible library containing marvellous manuscripts and discoveries, and
about the passion between a cook and a king. With The Invisible
Library, Thorvald Steen interweaves known and unknown, relying on facts
until they run out, then building his story on what is probable, to tell the
story of a little-known period in the life of one of the most renowned figures
in history. The result is an existential and inspired novel that goes to the
heart of the human experience—who are we in war, in love, during the final days
of life?