âItâs Greeceâs Dr. Zhivago but with a better story. And it would make a great movieâ.-- Kurt Russell, actor
In the tradition Of Corelliâs Mandolin and Eleni comes an epic historical fiction novel set in Greece. By Richard Romanus, a nominee for The Writers Guild Of America Award For Best Original Screenplay.
In the hardscrabble villages of northern Greece, strength is the only measure of a girlâs beauty. But Maria Christina is delicate, nearsighted, unmarried at 17 â already a spinster, in a town with few choicesâ and hopeless. Sheâs overshadowed by Matoula, the nimble, radiant older sister whom she loves but envies. Worse still, she smolders with shameful desire for handsome, worldly Yiannis, Matoulaâs husband, a doctor from sophisticated Athens.
Itâs the bitter winter of 1940, war just over the horizon, the Axis Powers massing to invade. All the able-bodied men have gone to defend the border. The women must supply their food and clothing, their bandages and bullets â on foot over mountain trails, by starlight, through deep snow. But only those deemed strong may help. Not Maria Christina. For her thatâs just another humiliation.
Defiantly, she joins Matoula on a supply run. And then her worst nightmare comes true: it is strong, deserving Matoula who dies. Yiannis is left a widower, torn between commitment to the resistance, where his skills are desperately needed, and responsibility for Zoitsa, the young daughter Matoula bore him.
War rages on â against the Italians, then the Germans, and then heartbreaking civil strife among the Greeks themselves. Conflict burns within Maria Christina and Yiannis, too. They are engulfed by passion, separated by duty to country, bonded by common loss and devoured by Maria Christinaâs guilt at surviving her more beautiful, capable sister.
A vivid epic of calamity and longing, of modernity vanquishing tradition, Matoulaâs Echo makes just one fragile promise of redemption in the form of Maria Christinaâs new awakening.
Praise For This Epic Greek Historical Fiction Romance Novel.
âA phenomenal achievement, not only because it tackles the great themes â war and civil war, heroism and sacrifice, love and loss, joy and misery, inner conflict and struggle merely to survive â but because it handles them so adroitly.â
-- Dr Darcy Powers, Professor of English at the University of Denver