Lady Munevver: The Opium Merchant’s Daughter by Eris Field Perese
The most famous waterways in the world are the two beautiful Turkish Straits—the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. The Bosphorus connects the Black Sea, where Russia has ports such as Sevastopol, to the Marmara Sea. Each year approximately 50,000 ships pass through the Bosphorus. Grain, produce, and 3 million gallons of oil are transported through the Bosphorus each year. The Dardanelles connects the Marmara Sea to the Aegean Sea and the Mediterranean Sea and from there to the world’s shipping lanes. For hundreds of years, the Straits were under the control of the Ottoman Empire and when the Ottoman Empire became the Turkish Republic in 1923, the Straits became known as the Turkish Straits.
The Turkish Straits have long been the coveted entrance to the world for land-locked Russia. For over two hundred years, as her territory and population expanded, Russia has tried to secure warm water ports, year-round ports such as Odessa that do not freeze in the winter. Warm water ports would enable her to increase her trading capacity. In the early days, it was the Ottoman Empire that controlled the Straits and the Ottoman Empire fought many wars to prevent Russia from capturing them and the Ottoman Empire’s capital city of Constantinople. Now it is the Republic of Turkey that controls the Straits and faces Russia’s renewed attempts to wrench control of the Straits from Turkey through the invasion of Ukraine, parts of which were once known as Crimea. Russia’s goal: the capture of the port city of Odessa.
This historical novel– Lady Munevver: The Opium Merchant’s Daughter– is set in the Victorian period as England is preparing to enter the War in the East, the Crimean War, to support the Ottoman Empire that has been invaded by Russia and to protect her lucrative trade routes. Russia’s 1853 invasion of Crimea resulted in three Empires—England, France, and the Ottoman Empire– declaring war on Russia. It precipitates a disastrous marriage for Lady Munevver. It changes the world with advances in ships and military weapons, the development of the telegraph with its ability to deliver war news almost instantly, and the creation of modern nursing by Florence Nightingale in Scutari Hospital.
In Surrey, England, the merchant father of beautiful but handicapped Munevver is obsessed with gaining acceptance by the ton. Refusing Munevver’s plea to marry her childhood love, William of Yorkshire, he arranges a marriage with James, the dissolute son of an impoverished, hard-handed Duke.
When England is drawn into the Crimean War, James joins the Light Brigade and sails to the Ottoman Empire to fight the invading Russians. After learning her husband has died in Scutari Hospital, an improvised hospital for English soldiers located across the Bosphorus from Constantinople, Munevver, terrified at what her father-in-law might do, flees England. Her destination: the ancient city of Aleppo in the eastern part of the Ottoman Empire where she hopes her uncle will shelter her in his vast trading compound.
Her escape ends in Constantinople when. the Sultan, irate at Queen Victoria’s command that he return the widow of one of her Lords, arranges a marriage for Munevver with Ari, a member of his court. Problem solved. Munevver is now the wife of an Ottoman citizen. She is invisible.
Banished to the ancient, primitive city of Ankara, the young couple struggles to survive political intrigue, intense cold, and lack of medical care. After Ari dies of tuberculosis, Munevver is desperate to return to Yorkshire, to her grandfather and to the man she loves, William. But how? Dare she accept the quid pro quo arrangement offered by the most powerful woman in the Ottoman Empire, the Sultan’s mother?
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Author Bio:
At the age of 17, Eris Field, determined to be a writer for the New Yorker Magazine, left Essex Junction, Vermont (population approximately 3000) and took a Grey Hound bus to New York. Unfortunately, her bus fare was only enough to take her to Albany, not New York City. She entered Union University School of Nursing and for the next 3 years rotated through the emergency rooms, the operating theater, and the different wards of Albany Hospital. It was there that she met and married Dogan, a surgical intern from Turkey.
They moved to Buffalo, NY where Dogan pursued a career in Neurosurgery and Eris completed her master’s degree in Psychiatric Nursing. It was during this time, that Eris studied writing with Sloane Wilson who had just published the ground-breaking novel The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit.
Along the way, Eris and Dogan had five children and provided summer experiences for exchange students from other countries.
To date, Eris has published a Family Saga of a Turkish family during the forced population exchanges, a textbook for psychiatric nurses, a historical romance, and six contemporary romances Ideas bubble up. Characters demand that their story be told and so she continues to write When not writing, as a member of the world organization, Knit for Peace, she knits sweaters that are given to the children of the world who need them.