Sunday, November 3, 2013

Review: The Harem Midwife by Roberta Rich

When I saw "The Harem Midwife" novel up for review in the Edelweiss catalog, it appealed to me because 1) I know nothing about harems 2) how women in harems gave birth 3) that there were harem midwives (but that makes sense thinking about it now) 4) how women in harems lived and got along with each other. After reading it, I now have quite a bit of new information about harems. Hannah Levi is a Jew, exiled from her home in Venice, now living in Constantinople and working for the Sultan Murat III as a midwife for his harem. Except there is a problem...the Sultan only desires his wife. He can't "perform" with any of the women in his harem so there aren't many births happening for the midwife to assist with at the moment. This all changes when a young, wild child is brought into the harem to see if she can stir up the attentions of the Sultan.
    
While this all sounds sexually charged and titillating, it's not really. The sexual aspects of the book are very mild and generally summed up in a few short lines. It's a long, long ways from a bodice ripper. If you're looking for that, this is not your book. What I liked best about the book might surprise you. The story line was great, the characters well written and the plot was interesting but here are some of the reasons that made the book 7 out of 10 stars for me:
* the descriptions of the palace and the rooms in the harem. Roberta Rich does an amazing job of describing the grandeur and opulence of the environment - the bathing rooms, the birthing kiosk, the consummation room, the zoo - all described with attention to every detail. Even the descriptions of the streets, carriages and markets made you feel like you were there and could see what the characters saw. "A dwarf with a rounded forehead unhooked the door of the cage. The birds took flight, swooping and swirling overhead. The scent of orange blossoms filled the air. Hannah moved toward one of the doves at her feet. Fastened to its neck and to the necks of all the birds were scented pomanders, filling the room with that glorious aroma. It was as though a silk canopy had become unmoored from the ceiling and drifted down, holding her in a veil of fragrant oranges." Isn't that description amazing? Can't you see it and smell it? Love that.

* the descriptions of the birthing process and ensuing party - "At home in Venice, the birth room was a hushed, secluded space with only a midwife and perhaps the laboring woman's mother and mother-in-law. Here the entire harem believe a mother's suffering was cause for celebration." This celebration included dwarves doing gymnastics, acrobats, musicians, jugglers, an astrologer and a ton of people milling around. Sounds like a circus to me and would have made me insane.

* little things that I can't possibly imagine but delighted to read about - "The garden should have been dark. It was not. The flower beds were so well lit that Cesca could see every petal on the nodding heads of the tulips...The lawn glowed with light so bright it appeared as though the world had turned topsy-turvy. Instead of the stars being in the heavens, they were a carpet of illumination undulating on the grass...As her eyes adjusted, she realized she was looking at the glow of scores of beeswax candles, but they were moving...She bent over the closest source of light, surprised to see a tortoise at her feet. On its back was a beeswax candle pressed into the shape of a red rosette. All those pricks of light were tortoises with candles attached to their shells. She hoped her awe was not too apparent." I would have been in awe and would have definitely shown it. Just that description and the image it conveys, is worth the price of the book alone!

This was a really good read. It wasn't a book that I couldn't pull myself away from but it WAS a book that had me going back to it every chance I could. It was an escape to a magical environment in an exotic locale which made it a very good book indeed. Hannah and Levi are also featured in the book "The Midwife of Venice" which is first in the series. "The Harem Midwife" will be released February 25, 2014.

The Harem Midwife: 7 out of 10

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