From Library Journal
Moore (The Statement, LJ 5/1/96) has again produced a deeply unsettling novel with a moral problem at its heart. When Napoleon III asks magician Henri Lambert to go to Algeria and put his powers in competition with an Arab holy man threatening jihad against the French, Henri and his young wife Emmeline are indelibly altered. If Lambert succeeds in postponing the necessary (in colonial terms) intervention of the French army, does he save the lives of soldiers and Arab Algerians alike? Or do all just die a bit later? This is not merely an academic question, as anyone who reads the gruesome and horrifying news stories of slaughter in contemporary Algeria will attest. Moore does not altogether succeed in establishing the splendor of the 19th-century French court but is wonderful at the heat and beauty of Algeria and at the sensual lure of the French soldier who troubles Emmeline's contentment.



