642 pages, Little, Brown and Company, ISBN-13: 978-0316011778
Lots of new authors get loads of attention and praise when their first book gains the interest of the right people – like, for instance, Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian, first published in 2005. Basically, our author blends the fictional Count Dracula with the very real Vlad Țepeș (The Impaler) with the story of Paul and his (unnamed) daughter and their quest to find the tomb of everybody’s favorite 15th Century Romanian Tyrant – who may or not be extant and unliving it up. To do so the novel ties together three separate narratives using letters and journals, much like the original Dracula: Paul’s mentor in the 1930s; that of Paul in the 1950s; and that of Paul’s daughter in the 1970s, with the last being the principle narration.
These letters and journal entries, written by earlier Dracula hunters and being read by later ones, form the basis of the book; so what we have, then, are one set of scholars reading an earlier scholar’s account who in turn read from this other scholar’s work which references an even earlier piece of work…layer upon layer upon layer of scholarship and research to read and sift through, and you the Reader are along for the ride through it all (it was, I think, an homage to Stoker’s original novel, which was structured in much the same way). But I often had to remind myself that I was reading a character’s letter…that went on for page after page after page with a level of detail that was…um, interesting. Yeah, let’s go with that.
And the pacing reflects this scholarly hunt, for even when a character is being hunted by the denizens of the dark, they still manage to tear through whole sheaves of paper and record how “I can hear them right now, outside my window, they are coming for me” and so on and so forth. Very thoughtful of them. And…well…unrealistic, for while, for the most part, I enjoyed Kostova’s writing, it was events like this that made me realize that I was reading a novel and not a record of events, which took me quite out of the fantasy. I get wanting to show off and write these wonderful passages in which the world in described minutely, but come on, already; does one write a 10-page (or more) letter while the forces of evil lurk outside your door?
And, well, there are other issues, not least the original MacGuffin that sets the plot in motion: a mysterious tome, consisting of empty pages but for a dragon woodcut in the center, is given to a character and, no matter what they do, they just can’t get rid of it. Following the clues of the woodcut should lead them to the mystery at the heart of The Historian – and here is where my first real problem with the book comes into focus, for as MacGuffins go this one is weak. I mean, a blank book with one woodcut? That’s it? No rhymes, or poems, or archaic words to set one off on a life-or-death quest? And why a book? Wouldn’t a broadsheet work just as well? There are better, more satisfactory ways to get a plot rolling.
As for the quest, there, too, we have issues. The scholars, spurred on by the book and disappearance of one of their own, begin their investigation, only to be checked by shadowy forces who assault, intimidate, steal, vandalize and even kill all who would oppose them (it’s never stated, but its vampires). Their motivation – and the appearance of the mastermind – are finally revealed at the end of the book and…man, was it dumb. DUMB, I tell ya. I’m really trying not to spoil it for you but you’d have thunk that an immortal would have thought up a better plan or have had loftier goals. After wading through 600+ pages of, admittedly, mostly artful prose to end her book so stupidly was the ultimate Lucy-and-Charlie-Brown-Football-Yank.
The Historian was, then, LONG, beautiful, intriguing but, ultimately, disappointing. I wish I could recommend it but the conclusion just left too bitter an aftertaste, even after page after eloquent page.






