The Janissary Tree: A Novel (Investigator Yashim)
The Janissary Tree: A Novel (Investigator Yashim) book cover

The Janissary Tree: A Novel (Investigator Yashim)

Hardcover – May 16, 2006

Price
$14.74
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
Sarah Crichton Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0374178604
Dimensions
6.23 x 1.11 x 9.18 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Goodwin, the author of a well-received history of the Ottoman Empire, Lords of the Horizons (1999), makes a welcome shift to fiction with this impressive first of a new mystery series set in the empire's declining decades. In 1836, though the corrupt elite troops known as the Janissaries were crushed 10 years earlier, there are ominous signs that their influence still persists in the twisted alleys and secret places of Istanbul. A series of crimes, including the barbaric murders of several soldiers and the theft of some precious jewels, leads eunuch Yashim Togalu to delve into the past in an effort to separate legend from truth. With special access to all areas of the sultan's royal court, Yashim uses his network of contacts to try to solve the crimes. The author, no surprise, does an excellent job of evoking his chosen locale. While his sleuth's character may be less developed than some readers might wish, no doubt Yashim will emerge as a more rounded figure in future entries of what one hopes will be a long-running series. (May) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Historian Goodwin, author of Lords of the Horizons (1999), introduces a promising new mystery series set in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire. When a string of murders disturbs the tenuous tranquility of the sultan's royal court, savvy eunuch Yashim Togalu is called upon to investigate. Digging deeper into the past in order to understand the perils of the present, Yashim discovers a link between the crimes and the Janissaries, a disloyal band of elite soldiers banned by the sultan ten years earlier. As Yashim wends his way in and out of the opulent palace and through the sordid back alleys of nineteenth-century Istanbul, the reader is treated to an appropriately exotic tour of a time and a place where intrigue, deceit, and corruption fueled perilous personal and political passions. Margaret Flanagan Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved "An unusual, exotic historical mystery that reads like literature and moves like a thriller." --George Pelecanos, author of Drama City Praise for Lords of the Horizons : A History of the Ottoman Empire:"A work of dazzling beauty...the rare coming together of historical scholarship and curiosity about distant places with luminous writing...a meditation on a vanished world that hovers like an apparition over today's grim headlines."-- The New York Times Book Review (Front page) Jason Goodwin's previous books include Lords of the Horizons : A History of the Ottoman Empire and On Foot to the Golden Horn . He lives in Sussex, England, is married with four children, speaks French and German and once walked from Poland to Istanbul. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Excerpted from The Janissary Tree by Jason Goodwin. Copyright © 2006 by Jason Goodwin. Published in May 2006 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. All rights reserved.xa01xa0Yashim flicked at a speck of dust on his cuff.xa0"One other thing, Marquise," he murmured.xa0She gazed at him levelly.xa0"The papers."xa0The Marquise de Merteuil gave a little laugh.xa0" Fl ûte! Monsieur Yashim, depravity is not a word we recognize in the Académie." Her fan played; from behind it she almost hissed, "It is a condition of mind."xa0Yashim was already beginning to sense that this dream was falling apart.xa0The marquise had fished out a paper from her décolletage and was tapping it on the table like a little hammer. He took a closer look. It was a little hammer. Tap tap tap .xa0He opened his eyes and stared around. The Château de Merteuil dissolved in the candlelight. Shadows leered from under the book-lined shelves, and from the corners of the room--a room and a half, you might say, where Yashim lived alone in a tenement in Istanbul. The leather-bound edition of Les Liaisons Dangereuses had slipped onto his lap. Tap tap tap .xa0" Evet, evet ," he grumbled. "I'm coming." He slipped a cloak around his shoulders and his feet into a pair of yellow slippers, and shuffled to the door. "Who is it?"xa0"Page boy."xa0Hardly a boy, Yashim considered, as he let the spindly old man into the darkened room. The single candle guttered in the sudden draft. It threw their shadows around the walls, boxing with one another before the page's shadow stabbed Yashim's with a flickering dagger. Yashim took the paper scroll and glanced at the seal. Yellow wax.xa0He rubbed his finger and thumb across his eyes. Just hours ago he'd been scanning a dark horizon, peering through the drizzle for lights and the sight of land. The lurching candlelight took his mind back to another lamp that had swayed in a cabin far out at sea, riding the winter storms. The captain was a barrel-chested Greek with one white eye and the air of a pirate, and the Black Sea was treacherous at this time of year. But he'd been lucky to find a ship at all. Even at the worst moments of the voyage, when the wind screamed in the rigging, waves pounded on the foredeck, and Yashim tossed and vomited in his narrow bunk, he had told himself that anything was better than seeing out the winter in that shattered palace in the Crimea, surrounded by the ghosts of fearless riders, eaten away by the cold and the gloom. He had needed to come home.xa0With a flick of his thumb he broke the seal.xa0With the scent of the sea in his nostrils and the floor still moving beneath his feet, he tried to concentrate on the ornate script.xa0He sighed and laid the paper aside. There was a lamp screwed to the wall and he lit it with the candle. The blue flames trickled slowly round the charred cloth. Yashim replaced the glass and trimmed the wick until the fitful light turned yellow and firm. Gradually the lamplight filled the room.xa0He picked up the scroll the page had given him and smoothed it out. Greetings , et cetera. At the bottom he read the signature of the seraskier, city commander of the New Guard, the imperial Ottoman army. Felicitations , et cetera. He scanned upward. From practice he could fillet a letter like this in seconds. There it was, wedged into the politesse: an immediate summons.xa0"Well?"xa0The old man stood to attention. "I have orders to return with you to barracks immediately." He glanced uncertainly at Yashim's cloak. Yashim smiled, picked up a length of cloth, and wound it around his head. "I'm dressed," he said. "Let us go."xa0Yashim knew that it hardly mattered what he wore. He was a tall, well-built man in his late thirties, with a thick mop of black curls, a few white hairs, no beard, but a curly black mustache. He had the high cheekbones of the Turks, and the slanting gray eyes of a people who had lived on the great Eurasian steppe for thousands of years. In European trousers, perhaps, he would be noticeable, but in a brown cloak--no. Nobody noticed him very much. That was his special talent, if it was a talent at all. More likely, as the marquise had been saying, it was a condition of mind. A condition of the body.xa0Yashim had many things--innate charm, a gift for languages, and the ability to open those gray eyes suddenly wide. Both men and women had found themselves strangely hypnotized by his voice, before they had even noticed who was speaking. But he lacked balls.xa0Not in the vulgar sense: Yashim was reasonably brave.xa0But he was that creature rare even in nineteenth-century Istanbul.xa0Yashim was a eunuch. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • When Jason Goodwin explored the Ottoman Empire in
  • Lords of the Horizons
  • ,
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • hailed it as "a work of dazzling beauty…the rare coming together of historical scholarship…with luminous writing." Now he returns to Istanbul, with a delicious mystery--
  • The Janissary Tree
  • .It is 1836. Europe is modernizing, and the Ottoman Empire must follow suit. But just before the Sultan announces sweeping changes, a wave of murders threatens the fragile balance of power in his court. Who is behind them? Only one intelligence agent can be trusted to find out: Yashim Lastname, a man both brilliant and near-invisible in this world. You see, Yashim is a eunuch. He leads us into the palace's luxurious seraglios and Istanbul's teeming streets, and leans on the wisdom of a dyspeptic Polish ambassador, a transsexual dancer, and a Creole-born queen mother. And he introduces us to the Janissaries. For 400 years, they were the empire's elite soldiers, but they grew too powerful, and ten years ago, the Sultan had them crushed. Are the Janissaries staging a brutal comeback?
  • The Janissary Tree
  • is the first in a series featuring the most enchanting detective since Precious Ramotswe of
  • The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency
  • . Splendidly paced and illuminating, it belongs beside Caleb Carr's
  • The Alienist
  • and the historical thrillers of Arturo Perez-Reverte.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(398)
★★★★
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(331)
★★★
15%
(199)
★★
7%
(93)
23%
(304)

Most Helpful Reviews

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And let not the eunuch say, Behold, I am a dry tree

Isaiah 56:3

Investigator Yashim, the hero of Jason Goodwin's first novel, "The Janissary Tree" may be a Turkish eunuch but it is not at all likely that anyone reading this book will think of him as a "dry tree". In fact, if Yashim's steamy encounter with the beautiful but lonely wife of the Russian ambassador to Turkey halfway through the book is any indication, this is one heck of a unique eunuch.

I would love to have been present when Goodwin pitched the idea of a novel (and the first in a proposed series) about a crime-solving eunuch in Istanbul to his agent or publisher. Fortunately, someone had the good sense to green light this project as Goodwin has crafted a highly-entertaining book.

The Janissary Tree is set in Istanbul in 1836. Ten years earlier the Janissaries, the Sultan's version of the Roman Empire's Praetorian Guards, had been crushed by the "New Guard", the Sultan's standing army. Like the Praetorian Guards the Janissaries had evolved from a protective legion to one that terrorized the populace and the Sultan. Now, ten years later, the mysterious disappearance of four members of the New Guard and the murder of one of the Sultan's harem heralds the possible return of the Janissaries. The return of the Janissaries threatens to destroy the Sultanate and the relative calm of Istanbul. Enter Investigator Yashim. He is given ten days to get to the bottom of the mystery.

Yashim is soon engulfed in murder and intrigue. Bodies begin to appear in bizarre places as Yashim and his friends (including a somewhat decadent Polish Ambassador who has no country to represent and a transvestite dancer) try to get to the bottom of this alleged revolt.

Goodwin is very good at keeping the plot boiling (in more ways than one). Goodwin, who studied Byzantine history at Cambridge and who has written books on the history of the Ottoman Empire, has ample knowledge of the time and the place and has put this knowledge to good use. Goodwin seems to convey a real sense of how the city must have looked, felt, and even smelled more than 180 years or so ago.

The Janissary Tree reminded me of Boris Akunin's Erast Fandorin novels (late 19th-century Russia) and Arturo Perez-Reverte's Captain Alatriste stories (17th-century Spain). They all take the standard detective or mystery story and transport the reader to a different time and place. As with both Akunin and Perez-Reverte's novels, Jason Goodwin's "The Janissary Tree" is an entertaining and diverting read. I look forward to the next in the series.

L. Fleisig
108 people found this helpful
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Murders in Istanbul in a romatic time

Not only set in the location of Istanbul in the 1830s but also set inside the fabric of the Ottoman empire life; there a clever and resourceful eunich is the go-to man when the Sultan's mother wants to solve the murder of a haarem girl and at same time the head of the army has a slight problem with officers starting to turn up dead in unusual ways. The author's strength is his understanding of the Ottomans and Istanbul; the reader sees and feels the strength of history and culture and its effect on the story. The characters are interesting, the mystery believable, the resolution smart and creditable. Written in 2006 in the structure influenced by Dan Brown's short chapter keep-it-moving style, it was a very enjoyable read and I hope there are more to come.
26 people found this helpful
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This is an extraordinary book

I had never heard of this author, but I'm SO GLAD I found this book. I am in the middle of reading it right now. I love mysteries, but find most of them too "light." This one isn't, and it's a real "find." I didn't know anything about the historical period, but that's no problem, because the author guides me gently through it. I do hope this will become a series.
7 people found this helpful
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Four stars is about all I can go with this one...

When I first picked up The Janissary Tree when it arrived at my library, I had great hopes. Jason Goodwin did a terrific job with his history of the Ottoman Empire, Lords of the Horizons. The Janissary Tree is his first novel, the first in a planned series. I suspect that Goodwin's skills as a mystery writer will improve as he practices his craft, but in all honesty, The Janissary Tree isn't a bad start.

Yashim Togalu has to be one of the most unique investigators in the history of mystery, a eunuch. I certainly found Yashim to be an engaging character. As a eunuch Yashim has the Sultans absolute trust. He also has unlimited access into the most protected areas of the palace...the harem.

The plot is pretty simple. The year is 1836 and the sultan has been modernizing both Instanbul and the Empire. Apparently not everyone is happy with the sultans plans however. There have been murders in and around the palace which may threaten the sultan's life. Who is behind this evil? Heading the list of suspects are the Janissaries, once the most valued of the sultans soldiers but now disbanded because of disloyalty.

Is Yashim up to the task? I'd say read the book, but then you know I was playing games. Yashim solves the murders and I can't wait for the next book.

The Janissary Tree is full of atmosphere and the Instanbul of the early to mid 19th century is an exotic place. I always compare these types of reads as "feeling like a black and white movie". You know what I mean...great lighting with lots of shadows. Add the wonderful characters, that Goodwin has created for us, a Polish ambassador and transvestite dancer, and you have an above average read. I gave it four stars because the novel just seemed to lack "the final nail."

I suspect that the books will improve as time goes by. Goodwin is a good writer and apparently loves to do the research it takes to write a period book like this one.

I think you'll enjoy The Janissary Tree.
7 people found this helpful
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An Ottoman sleuth

In 1836, the Ottoman Empire is becoming modernised, along with the rest of Europe and the days of the Sultans and their harems are clearly numbered. Yashim Togalu is a eunuch at the court of Sultan Mahmut 2 and is a trusted courtier and a gifted, amateur detective. When a concubine of the harem is found strangled, the Sultan's mother, the Valide Sultan commands Yashim to discover the identity of the murderer as she fears for the life of her son. Following almost immediately, the body of an army cadet from a high ranking family, is found, butchered, under weird circumstances. Again Yashim is dispatched, this time by the head of the army to discover why this has happened. The threat of political unrest is very real, especially the threat that the old military leaders, the Janissaries, who have been disbanded by the Sultan, may be about to return to their old positions of power. Yashim finds himself in danger of his life as he attempts to untangle both of these murders.
6 people found this helpful
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No better way to pick up history.

A very relaxing and entertaining way to learn about the transition period after the revolt and the demise of the Janissaries and the very early ideas of change that led to the Attaturk republic.
6 people found this helpful
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Fascinating

The Ottoman Empire is coming to an end and Sultan recognizes they must move into modern times. But gruesome murders, with clues leading back to the brutal days of the Janissaries, are threatening the peace and Turkish eunuch Yashim Togalu is employed to find the killer.

Goodwin does a marvelous job of bring this period and setting to life. Although I'd have liked a bit more character development, Yashim, his friends the Polish Ambassador, the transvestite dancer, her landlady, the grocer, and more are wonderful characters about whom I want to know more. The scene with the Russian ambassador's wife disavows one's usual perceptions of a eunuch. Goodwin's skill for sense of time and place, as well as building suspense, is what made this a stand-out read for me. I shall definitely be looking for the next book in this series.
5 people found this helpful
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Fascinating

The Ottoman Empire is coming to an end and Sultan recognizes they must move into modern times. But gruesome murders, with clues leading back to the brutal days of the Janissaries, are threatening the peace and Turkish eunuch Yashim Togalu is employed to find the killer.

Goodwin does a marvelous job of bring this period and setting to life. Although I'd have liked a bit more character development, Yashim, his friends the Polish Ambassador, the transvestite dancer, her landlady, the grocer, and more are wonderful characters about whom I want to know more. The scene with the Russian ambassador's wife disavows one's usual perceptions of a eunuch. Goodwin's skill for sense of time and place, as well as building suspense, is what made this a stand-out read for me. I shall definitely be looking for the next book in this series.
5 people found this helpful
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First Mystery Novel by Author

I had never read this author before, but I'm very interested in Byzantine and the Otterman Empire after playing the pc adventure game "Byzantia." From playing the game, it was nice to actually recognize some of the places in the novel. And I do like mysteries. There are a couple of gruesome murders in it though. This isn't a deep, convoluted, 1200-page book, so it was an easy read. I am definitely looking forward to more mysteries by him.
4 people found this helpful
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Thrilling Tale Set in a Facinating City

The tale alone is facinating (as you can see from the other reviews), but it is set in Ninteenth Century Istanbul when the Ottomans are struggling to enter the modern world. The fictional story enhanced by the scholarship of Mr. Goodwin concerning the Ottoman Empire and the City of Istanbul makes this a facinating book. I am looking forward to other stories in this series.
4 people found this helpful