Stealing Fire by Jo Graham
Posted: Tue Feb 11, 2025 8:05 pm
I finally got round to reading this, having given it a miss when it came out in 2010 as it wasn't directly about Alexander (or Hephaestion). It is set after Alexander's death and he does appear 2 or 3 times, but he is more an underlying thread than a character. Hephaestion appears quite a bit in the first half of the book, and then rather disappears. His character is more clearly defined than Alexander's.
The main character is Lydias, a Carian who becomes one of Hephaestion's cavalry officers, then becomes involved with Ptolemy and Thais following Alexander's death and is instrumental in hijacking Alexander's funeral cortege and taking his body to Egypt. The battle scenes are quite well and convincingly done, showing how commanders had to think on their feet and react to the course of events.
Overall it is a well-constructed novel, with themes interweaving and reappearing, and a decent read, though it won't change your life. The narrative is rather bitty, being constantly broken up into small sections, and in the first half of the novel there are a lot jumps back into the past, giving the impression that several different stories are being told. This tends to make it difficult to become immersed in the world being created, and the pace at the beginning of the second half of the novel definitely slackens and loses momentum once these flashbacks virtually stop. There are otherworldly, spiritual themes, and a strong belief in reincarnation that may nor may not be palatable. Personally I found it unconvincing as I am not sure Egyptians or Persians believed in reincarnation, and though the minor historical inaccuracies, and annoyancies such as steel breastplates are distractions, they didn't seriously flaw the novel.
The main character is Lydias, a Carian who becomes one of Hephaestion's cavalry officers, then becomes involved with Ptolemy and Thais following Alexander's death and is instrumental in hijacking Alexander's funeral cortege and taking his body to Egypt. The battle scenes are quite well and convincingly done, showing how commanders had to think on their feet and react to the course of events.
Overall it is a well-constructed novel, with themes interweaving and reappearing, and a decent read, though it won't change your life. The narrative is rather bitty, being constantly broken up into small sections, and in the first half of the novel there are a lot jumps back into the past, giving the impression that several different stories are being told. This tends to make it difficult to become immersed in the world being created, and the pace at the beginning of the second half of the novel definitely slackens and loses momentum once these flashbacks virtually stop. There are otherworldly, spiritual themes, and a strong belief in reincarnation that may nor may not be palatable. Personally I found it unconvincing as I am not sure Egyptians or Persians believed in reincarnation, and though the minor historical inaccuracies, and annoyancies such as steel breastplates are distractions, they didn't seriously flaw the novel.