brief synopsis:
Two people, and ultimately their descendants, battle for the philosopher's stone for centuries.
setting:
Naples
Baghdad
Zabqine, Southern Lebanon
Beirut
Geneva
Tomar, Portugal
Paris
Turkey
Nerva Zhori
Lisbon, Portugal
Philadelphia
named personalities:
Marquis de Montferrat aka Comte de St Germain aka Comte Bellamare aka Marquis d'Aymar aka Chevalier Schoening aka Sebastian Guerreiro aka Sebastian Botelho - a false marquis who also posed as an Arab sheikh; a Portuguese inquisitor
Raimondo di Sangro - a prince of San Severo
Charles VII - a Spanish king of Naples and Sicily; one of Raimondo's friends and admirers; a champion of discourse, learning, and cultural debate
Contessa di Czergy - a dear old lady
Eric Rucker - a captain of the First Battalion, Seventh Cavalry Regiment
Saddam Hussein - an Iraqi president
Huda Ammash aka Mrs Anthrax - a scientist; a daughter of a former minister of defense; rumored to be the head of Iraq's biological weapons program
Jess Eddison - a sergeant
Mengele - Josef Mengele, a German physician
Evelyn Bishop aka Sitt Evelyn (Lady Evelyn) - a professor of archaeology in her 60s
Farouk - a short, paunchy, balding chain-smoker; a dealer in antiquities and a facilitator
Ramez - a diminutive, hyperactive ex-student of Evelyn; an assistant professor in Evelyn's department; a Shi'ite
Jesus Christ - a Jewish religious leader
Thomas - a saint
Abu Barzan - an old friend of Farouk who deals in antiquities and owns a small shop in Al-Mawsil (Mosul)
Mahfouz Zacharia - the curator of the National Museum of Antiquities in Baghdad
Hajj Ali Salloum - a Baghdad-based antiques dealer
Tom Webster aka Bill Kirkwood - an archeologist-historian with the Haldane Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World
Omar - the leader of the hakeem's hit team; a man with close-cropped, jet-black hair, deep-set eyes, and a pockmarked face
Coco - the Lounge's resident parrot who can faultlessly imitate an incoming artillery shell
Dan Rather - an American journalist
Peter Jennings - a Canadian-American journalist
Mia Bishop - Evelyn's daughter
Jon Stewart - an American tv host
Adelaide - Evelyn's sister
Aubrey - Adelaide's husband
Ivar the Boneless - a Viking invader
Batgirl - a fictional superheroine
John Baumhoff - a porcine, balding, pasty-skinned, fifty-something American embassy's man
Isaac Montalto - a close friend of Sebastian's father
Franciso Pedroso - a charismatic and forceful grand inquisitor
Clement V - the 1312 pope
Rocaberti - an archbishop who led the Tarragonese Council; a friend of the Templar warrior-monks
James II - a king of Aragon
Dinis - a king of Portugal
Philip the Fair - a king who persecuted the Templars
Jim Corben aka Humphrey - a trim, cropped-haired, slightly tanned, mid thirties American embassy's economic counselor; Mia stated that he could be using Jim, along with such names as Mike and Joe, as a cover name
Fawwaz - one of Omar's men
Wasseem - ditto
Gil Grissom - a fictional forensic entomologist
Aladdin - a fictional hero of a Middle Eastern folk tale
Francis E Meloy - an ambassador who was kidnapped and assassinated in Beirut in 1976
Robert Ames - the CIA's Near East director who was killed in 1983
Len Hayflick - a CIA station chief
Imad Mughniyah - the man thought to be behind the truck bomb that blew up the marine's compound in 1983 and killed 241 servicemen
Jake Olshansky - a technical operations officer
Mike Boustany - a local historian who was working with Evelyn
Simon Wiesenthal - a Jewish Nazi-hunter
Plato - an Athenian philosopher
Friedrich Kekulé - a nineteenth-century German chemist
Carl Jung - a Swiss psychiatrist
Avicenna aka Ibn Sina - the most influencial physician of his time; an accomplished philosopher ad poet by the age of eighteen
Jabir ibn Hayyan - ditto
Al-Farabi 'Second Teacher' - a scientist and philosopher
Aristotle - a Greek philosopher and polymath
Al-Razi aka Rhazes - the father of plaster of paris
Al-Biruni - author of extensive treatises about conjoined twins
Tavernier - presumably Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, a French traveler
Morgagni - Giovanni Battista Morgagni, an Italian anatomist; the father of modern anatomical pathology
Boerhaave - Herman Boerhaave, a Dutch physician
Thomas Fuller - author of Pharmacopoeia Extemporanea
Luigi Cornaro - author of Discourses on the Temperate Life
Thérésia de Condillac - a childless, moneyed widow
Madame Geoffrin - a salon proprietress
Roger - a coachman
Arturo - Raimondo's son
Rousseau - Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a Genevan philosopher
Voltaire - a French philosopher
Diderot - Denis Diderot, ditto
Mike Boustany - a historian
Leila - a CIA translator
Alexander the Great - a great conqueror
Ptolemy - one of Alexander the Great's generals
Diocletian - a Roman emperor
Ludovico - a hakeem
Queirolo - Francesco Queirolo, an Italian Genoese-born sculptor
Casanova - Giacomo Casanova, an Italian adventurer, and author
Greg - a man with short chestnut hair and a thick-set neck
Louis XVI - the last king of France before the fall of the monarchy during the French Revolution
EB White - dubbed the martini his 'elixir of quietude'
Demikhov - a Russian scientist who was researching head transplants back in the 50s
Frodo - Frodo Baggins, the fictional protagonist of The Lord of the Rings
Bryan - an Australian hired gun
Hector - a South African hired gun
Mohsen - Abu Barzan's reserved friend
Bashar - Abu Barzan's paunchy, prematurely balding nephew
Miguel aka Michael - Sebastian and Thérésia's son
Rudwaan - a shooter of Omar
Satan - a fallen angel who had repented, been pardoned by God, and had been reinstated in heaven as the chief of all angels
Marques de Pombal - the 1765 effective ruler of Portugal
Madame de Fontenay - a Parisian lady
Salem - the mokhtar's son
Shāker - the mokhtar's cousin
Sulayman - the mokhtar
Muneer and Arîya - an elderly couple
Abu Fares Al-Masboudi - a little-known scientist-philosopher who had studied under Avicenna
Al-Qa'aim - an Iraqi caliph
terms:
p49: For a moment, she lost sight of the Merc, then it reappeared half a dozen or so cars ahead, rushing across town, its stealthy shadow close behind.
*First time I've seen a Mercedes referred to as Merc.
p107: Corben flexed his fingers and felt his muscles tighten as each killer pulled a 9mm automatic, rolled a silencer into place, and chambered a round.
*I guess I'd prefer the word screwed instead.
p167: It took a split second for St. Germain to realize it was a crossbow, and before he could shout it down, the rider took aim and fired. The small arrow sliced the air with a sharp whisper and struck the coachman squarely in the chest.
*An arrow is associated with a bow. With a crossbow, it should be a bolt.
typo:
p101: Corben sized up the room with an expert eye and realized another vist--a longer, more thorough one--would be necessary, as soon as he could get Mia settled somewhere safe.