Personal photos of historic places that are settings in The Ruby-Viper Trilogy
I’m pleased to share some treasured photos with readers (or potential readers) of my Ruby-Viper Trilogy, which was shaped by these experiences.
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PHOTO SET #1 of 4
1953: Visiting Pompeii with my parents
These photos, taken by my mother, show me at age seven on my first visit to Pompeii. I told my parents that day that I had been there before. It was all very familiar, and that sense of déjà vu has never left me. I feel it whenever I go back to Pompeii, Herculaneum, the Roman Forum, and the Colosseum. I don’t believe in reincarnation, but…
As an adult, I’ve returned to those places and visited others featured in my books, such as the Etruscan necropolis at Caere (now Cerveteri, Italy), which was already 1,000 years old at the time of my novels; plus Athens and the ancient ports of Piraeus and Itanos (both in Greece).
In my teens—and with my mother’s full encouragement—I devoured classic fiction on the Roman Empire: The Last Days of Pompeii, Quo Vadis, Ben Hur, Blood of the Martyrs, and The Robe.
Since then, I’ve read newer novels set in the time period and in the places that I write about in my trilogy — Italy, Sicily, Greece, Syria, Judea, Egypt — and studied their histories and cultures.
Rubies of the Viper, The Viper Amulet, and The Ruby Ring are direct results of the fascination that began on that long-ago visit to Pompeii with my parents.
I want to acknowledge a special debt of gratitude to my mother, who was the one who got me hooked on reading historical fiction and encouraged my own creative writing. I wish she could have lived to read my novels.
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PHOTO SET #2 of 4
In 1990, even though it was my second visit to Pompeii, it was my first time there as an adult and my husband Bernie’s first time ever. We enjoyed exploring it and also Herculaneum, the Colosseum (our second time there together), the Forum and other historic parts of Rome, and an even-older Etruscan necropolis near the coast. These places play roles as settings, both major and minor, in two of my novels: Rubies of the Viper and The Ruby Ring.
1973 & 1990: THE COLOSSEUM
In 1973 (top photo below), during our first European trip together, Bernie and I wandered off the street into the Colosseum and had fun exploring it on our own. The folks behind us had done that, too.
In 1990 (lower photo below), it was still uncrowded enough that we did exactly the same thing. Nowadays, you hardly can get in without being part of a tour group.
1990: ROME
I photographed Bernie looking out over Rome. Then, he “shot” me beside the Tiber River.
1990: ROMAN FORUM & PALATINE HILL
Bernie and I had a blast roaming around the Forum ruins.
On historic Palatine Hill, I sat cross-legged on the ground, communing with the spirits of long-dead Romans amid wildflowers and the crumbling remains of ancient mansions.
1990: THE ETRUSCAN NECROPOLIS NEAR CAERE (NOW CERVETERI)
I photographed Bernie standing beside two of the thousand-plus 3,000-year-old “beehive tombs” at the Etruscan necropolis near modern-day Cerveteri, Italy. The necropolis is known today as Banditaccia. The day we were there, we and a group of Italian high schoolers on a field trip had the amazing place all to ourselves.
These tombs already were 1,000 years old at the time my characters were there in Rubies of the Viper. They knew the nearby town by its historic name, Caere.
1990: POMPEII
In this ancient town, which was destroyed by a volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79, Bernie ordered “two of something” in an excavated cookshop.
And I straddled pedestrian crossing blocks in front of an unexcavated street and buildings.
1990: HERCULANEUM
We visited this excavated resort town, which in AD 79 had been destroyed by a river of molten lava. Ironically, the molten lava preserved Herculaneum’s structures better than those in its larger neighbor Pompeii, which suffered an intense bombardment of volcanic rocks.
Hundreds of residents of Herculaneum died of asphyxiation amid a pyroclastic surge of superheated gases that reached temperatures ranging from 400 to 900 degrees. All this destruction came from Mount Vesuvius, which is still an active volcano.
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PHOTO SET #3 of 4
1992: Athens
Athens is one of the settings in my novel The Viper Amulet. For a whole lovely week, from our hotel-room balcony, Bernie and I enjoyed this superb view of the Acropolis, which my fictional characters also had relished from a similar inn… two thousand years earlier.
And we noted Bernie’s striking resemblance to a mythic figure in the Acropolis Museum.
One morning, we climbed a steep stone stairway up to the Acropolis and spent hours admiring its classic buildings, including the caryatid (“maidens of Karya”) on the temple known as the Erechtheion (top photo below) and the fifth-century BC Parthenon. As you can see, there were only a few others “up there” with us.
Someone tipped us off to this vantage point overlooking the city of Athens. It was wildly windy, but I’m glad we didn’t miss seeing these vistas.
The harbor at Piraeus, one of the settings in The Viper Amulet (and also briefly revisited in The Ruby Ring), is visible in the background beyond Bernie’s hat.
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PHOTO SET #4 of 4
1992: Crete
On this largest island in Greece, we rented a car and spent a week prowling around, including the archaeological site at the ancient port at Itanos (below), which is one of the settings in Rubies of the Viper and briefly mentioned in The Ruby Ring. This photo is the best I have of that harbor, even though it shows none of the ruins.
Instead of port ruins, I’ll share a few other experiences as we soaked up the landscape and culture of the mountains, back roads, and villages… and some of the friendly people whom we got to know on Crete. (We also visited Knossos, the great Minoan palace, but that’s not in any of my books, so I’m not showing it here.)
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