Sometimes you must put yourself in the way of destiny.
Poland, without a doubt, may be the most inauspicious country in Europe. Its long and turbulent history is filled with a multitude of invasions, occupations, and divisions. From all directions, foes lay in wait to cross her borders and enslave her peoples and partitioned her lands. With no real topographical barriers to protect her from the invading hoards, Poland lay at the mercy of fate and fate seldom smiled on her. With the terror of the French Revolution bringing down long established monarchs, other European kingdoms were worried about possible revolutionary repercussions.
“Peace does not last without conflict.”
The seventeen-year-old Countess Anna Maria Berzowska finds herself suddenly an orphan when both her father and mother unexpectantly die within a very short time. Count Leo Gronski and his wife the Countess Stella Gronska, Anna’s uncle and aunt take her from her home in Sochaczew to their home for a year. Anna’s introduction to this new society proves just how innocent, inexperienced, and naïve she was and how sheltered her life had been. When she meets her uncle’s neighbor, Jan (Janek) Stelnicki, sparks immediately begin to fly but their romance would be everything but easy. Her cousin, Zofia Gronska, in pure selfishness, poses and prances as a vixen spreading poison in her wake. Throughout the chronicle, the Vistula River flows continually, unperturbed, and unhampered, never changing or diverging as the world around it changes like the seasons. And speaking of seasons, the Polish winters leave the reader shivering regardless of the temperature that surrounds them. Sights, smells, sound, and feelings, all the senses are explored and displayed masterfully by the author.
Customs, beliefs, attitudes, values, and traditions are lavishly presented, adding color, depth and interest to the tale. The great chasm between the nobility and peasantry is much like that of their neighbor Russia and proved to be a constant ground for unrest. Personal and political machinations, maneuverings, and intrigues keep the reader turning the pages and devouring every word. The author mixes real and fictional characters and historical events to weave an intriguing and entertaining tale that the reader would long remember. One can’t help but empathize with the desecration, violation, and victimization of Poland’s lands and peoples. This story reminds me of, and indeed, could match the sweeping grandeur and literary quality of works as Russka (1991) by Edward Rutherfurd (aka Francis Edward Wintle), Leon Uris’s Mila 18 (1983), and James Michener’s Poland (1983) but most of all to me it resembles, rivals and in some ways surpasses War and Peace (1869) by Leo Tolstoy.
I have a predilection for sagas, the longer, the better. This novel fits the bill in every way. It is an intricate story of life and love, masterly weaved into a highly intriguing romance. This missive is divided into six parts as the story progresses through Anna’s eventful life and Poland’s pending fate. This is the first book of the Poland Trilogy and I can say without a doubt that I will read the following two, Against a Crimson Sky (#2) and The Warsaw Conspiracy (#3).