Thief of Corinth

36534238

Thief of Corinth
Tessa Afshar
Tyndale House Publishers

First-century Corinth is a city teeming with commerce and charm. It’s also filled with danger and corruption—the perfect setting for Ariadne’s greatest adventure.

After years spent living with her mother and oppressive grandfather in Athens, Ariadne runs away to her father’s home in Corinth, only to discover the perilous secret that destroyed his marriage: though a Greek of high birth, Galenos is the infamous thief who has been robbing the city’s corrupt of their ill-gotten gains.

Desperate to keep him safe, Ariadne risks her good name, her freedom, and the love of the man she adores to become her father’s apprentice. As her unusual athletic ability leads her into dangerous exploits, Ariadne discovers that she secretly revels in playing with fire. But when the wrong person discovers their secret, Ariadne and her father find their future—and very lives—hanging in the balance.

When they befriend a Jewish rabbi named Paul, they realize that his radical message challenges everything they’ve fought to build, yet offers something neither dared hope for.

     I've been enjoying Tessa Afshar's books for years, but I was especially looking forward to this one--its plot seemed much more adventure-novel like than most Biblical fiction, and I've also been interested in reading more fiction that takes place in Greece during this era, so my curiosity about this book was doubled.

     Thief of Corinth, like Bread of Angels and Land of Silence, doesn't follow the traditional plot structure of most novels: it feels more like a fictional biography of someone who could have lived, with the way it follows the characters as they grow up. The characters act like real, relatable people, and I appreciated that the plot didn't always take the route that I expected. There were times I thought the writing was a little stiff, but overall Thief of Corinth was a fun book that I found myself reading quickly.

I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for my honest review.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In This Moment

The Words We Lost

Everything is Just Beginning