The Death of Kings
Books | Fiction / Action & Adventure
4.5
Conn Iggulden
The second volume in the acclaimed Emperor series, in which Conn Iggulden brilliantly interweaves history and adventure to recreate the astonishing life of Julius Caesar -- an epic tale of ambition and rivalry, bravery and betrayal, from an outstanding new voice in historical fiction. The young Caesar must overcome enemies on land and at sea to become a battle-hardened leader -- in the spectacular new novel from the bestselling author of The Gates of Rome. Forced to flee Rome, Julius Caesar is serving on board a war galley in the dangerous waters of the Mediterranean and rapidly gaining a fearsome reputation. But no sooner has he had a memorable victory than his ship is captured by pirates and he is held to ransom. Abandoned on the north African coast after hard months of captivity, he begins to gather a group of recruits that he will eventually forge into a unit powerful enough to gain vengeance on his captors and to suppress a new uprising in Greece. Returning to Rome as a hero -- and as an increasingly dangerous problem for his enemies -- Caesar is reunited with his boyhood companion Brutus. But soon the friends are called upon to fight as they have never fought before, when a new crisis threatens to overwhelm the city -- in the form of a rebellious gladiator named Spartacus!
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More Details:
Author
Conn Iggulden
Pages
532
Publisher
Harper
Published Date
2011
ISBN
0007437137 9780007437139
Community ReviewsSee all
"I found this book at Westminster Abbey after reading the back cover, which gave a gripping explanation of how a few famous monarchs met untimely ends. I ended up really enjoying this book and considering Brewer’s explanations for each monarchs death from William the Conqueror to Queen Victoria. My qualms come from Brewer being a surgeon and not a historian, and I noticed some misinformation (such as Burke and Hare operating in London when they really were committing murder in Edinburgh) but nothing too extreme. I mainly took his descriptions with a grain of salt. There was some inconsistency with how much of a monarchs life he described before he got to their death but I still enjoyed the descriptions. Overall, a really interesting read and I do recommend!"