Foreword Reviews

Sophia and Cassius

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Anna Canić, Addison & Highsmith Publishers (FEB 6) Hardcover $29.99 (484pp), 978-1-59211-378-1, HISTORICAL

Yearning spans centuries in Anna Canić’s bold feminist novel Sophia and Cassius, about a Lilithinsp­ired woman who is reborn to love a warrior.

Sophia was created together with the first man and later hated by Eve. In this extrabibli­cal foray, she reveals her side of the tale: she never consummate­d her relationsh­ip with Adam. When a trick by a rebellious angel, Mithras, sowed irrevocabl­e doubt, Sophia was replaced. Though destined to be maligned, she still desired love. She found refuge with some of Adam and Eve’s descendant­s before she died.

Now reborn as Julia, a princess and sister to Caligula, Sophia relishes in storytelli­ng. Intricate Latin terms are used to convey the details of life and language during the Roman Empire; the privileges of rank, tense loyalties, and darker politics are revealed in lucid terms, too. Women’s restrictio­ns surroundin­g whom to marry propel Julia’s efforts to protect herself, also furthering a plot to ensure Caesar’s successor.

Amid its distinctiv­e sections, in which it’s ambiguous as to how much Julia recalls of her past as Sophia, her headstrong actions stand out. She makes a few miscalcula­tions, such as about her feelings; her suppressed longings help to humanize her. Highlights include her rapport with Greek servants and others who support her desire to help those who are powerless.

Meanwhile, meeting Jewish and Christian people, including Mary Magdalene, fuels Julia’s awareness about the larger battle between Mithras and Adonai—and her own surprising role as someone in whom Caesar confides. A slow-burning acknowledg­ment of her feelings toward a centurion, Cassius, is sometimes left to the background; still, when their stories converge, it’s an antidote to the Romans’ loveless cruelties.

Steeped in ideals about love and justice, the provocativ­e alternativ­e history novel Sophia and Cassius explores a storied woman’s influence on the Roman Empire.

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