A rare U.S. appearance and her only New
York event
Join us for a reading and discussion
with Julia Kristeva, renowned philosopher, feminist, and novelist. She will
read from her latest novel Murder in Byzantium. A book signing reception
will follow the reading.
In this absorbing, suspenseful novel
Julia Kristeva combines social satire, medieval history, philosophy, psychoanalytic
theory, and autobiography within a gruesome murder mystery. Murder in Byzantium
deftly moves from eleventh-century Europe, wracked by the turbulence of
the First Crusade, to the sun-dappled, cultural wasteland of present-day Santa
Varvara, threatened by religious cults, gangs, and a serial killer on the loose.
This killer is murdering members of a
dubious religious sect, the New Pantheon, and leaving a mysterious figure eight
drawn on their corpses. Meanwhile, Sebastian Chrest-Jones, a noted professor
of human migrations, clandestinely writing a novel about the Byzantine princess-historian
Anna Comnena, disappears on a quest to learn more about an ancestor who roamed
across Europe to Byzantium during the First Crusade. Kristeva's recurring characters,
detective Northrop Rilsky and the French journalist Stephanie Delacour, step
in and desperately try to piece together the two-part mystery in the midst of
their unexpected love affair.
In the tradition of Umberto Eco, Susan Sontag, and Ian
McEwan, Kristeva skillfully weaves philosophical and critical ideas into her
fiction. Peering into the mores, obsessions, and excesses of contemporary society,
Kristeva offers an engrossing portrait of Santa Varvara, a paradoxical place
of sunshine and pollution where skeletons lurk in the closets of politicians
and oil company executives. Her descriptions of the First Crusade and the Byzantine
Empire vividly evoke a distant past while speaking to such contemporary concerns
as immigration, fundamentalism, terrorism, and the East-West divide. Murder
in Byzantium is also the only work in which Kristeva explores her Bulgarian
roots. In the midst of this rich, multilayered historical novel, Kristeva also
presents three stunning, closely observed, and interlocking portraits of characters
struggling with loss and emptiness in their personal histories and day-to-day
lives.
Julia Kristeva is a renowned psychoanalyst, critic, and professor
of linguistics at the Université de Paris VII. She is the author of many
acclaimed works and of three previous novels, including The Samurai,
The Old Man and the Wolves, and Possessions.