| About the Book
Baltasar Albueno (b. 1480, d. 1550), is the illegitimate, but only,
son of a noble Spanish father and a Moorish slave girl. He is sent off
to Venice with a lethal family secret, a gentleman's education,
divided religious loyalties, no inheritance, and a missing foreskin.
The Ottoman Turks, North African pirates, a corrupt and expansionist
papacy, and the emerging nation states of France, Spain and Portugal
are all threatening the well-being of the Venetian trading empire. A
harried Venetian spymaster sees where the young man's true talents lie
and recruits him as a secret agent. Baltasar—hand-reared,
home-schooled, pampered, and trusting—is thrown into an unforgiving
world of intrigue and warfare. In Venice, he makes the acquaintance of
a variety of colorful outsiders: a young nobleman and gifted swordsman
with sodomite tendencies, a converted Jew and brothel owner with
literary aspirations, a lovely and erudite nun of noble lineage, and
an ambitious teenage courtesan who becomes his friend and confidant.
Even with the assistance of such worldly colleagues, Baltasar's
reeducation and survival is in question to the very end as, with
humor, self deprecation, and not inconsiderable pain, he revises his
thinking about his employers, his profession, and his approach to
life—and death. "From
the author of Punjab Nights comes thoughtful espionage and
adventure, a well-told tale set in one of the most interesting and
formative periods of world history."
"What better way to approach history than as an unsentimental tale
of love and adventure told by a man who aspires to be good in a world
that will make him, and those around him, pay for such hubris?" "The
main protagonist is no simple-minded Billy Budd; he has charm, wit and
talents, and employs them in pursuit of selfish, but unconventional,
ends. And there's the rub."
". . . fully-developed characters of both sexes who stay with you
to the end—and beyond."
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