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Repost for @Librarybelle
We are going to Ancient Rome in this month‘s #LiteraryCrew #BuddyRead !
All are welcome to join! Let @Librarybelle know if you want to be added to or removed from the tag list.
Repost for @Librarybelle
We are going to Ancient Rome in this month‘s #LiteraryCrew #BuddyRead !
All are welcome to join! Let @Librarybelle know if you want to be added to or removed from the tag list.
We‘re going to Ancient Rome in this month‘s #LiteraryCrew #BuddyRead !
All are welcome to join! Please let me know if you wish to be added to or removed from the tag list.
Repost for @Librarybelle
March‘s #LiteraryCrew selection aligns perfectly with the Ides of March…Julius Caesar, Rome, and politics.
For this low key #BuddyRead read at your own pace throughout the month and discussion questions will be posted on March 31st. @Librarybelle will post periodic check ins throughout the month.
Please let @Librarybelle know if you would like to be added to or removed from the tag list.
March‘s #LiteraryCrew selection aligns perfectly with the Ides of March…Julius Caesar, Rome, and politics.
For this low key #BuddyRead , read at your own pace throughout the month, and discussion questions will be posted on March 31st. I‘ll post periodic check ins throughout the month.
Please let me know if you would like added to or removed from the tag list.
I was enjoying this book up to a point, a Gaulish warrior traveling through Caesar's Rome to Persia. The perspective was interesting. I felt like it was going to be a solid rec for people who love Shogun etc.
Then it got to Greece and the portrayal of two young teens sexuality was deeply horrible. It's a subject that takes a delicate hand, but this went somewhere beyond being clumsy, into territory that I found deeply repulsive.
“There is in fact no way of correcting wrongdoing in those who think that the height of virtue consists in the execution of their will.”
"Sovereign power is nothing if it does not care for the welfare of others, and...it is the task of a good ruler to keep his power in check, to resist the passions of unbridled desire and implacable rage."
A literary friend of Perilla's asks him to look into the death of her husband, though nobody, including the widow, seems particularly sorry he's dead. Meanwhile Corvinus's adopted daughter and her husband find a body which somebody had stabbed even though he was already dead of natural causes.
A nice twisty tale, made even more so by the fact that I kept getting Perilla and Marilla confused.
A consul's wife asks Marcus Corvinus to look into the death of her uncle, whose death Alexander the Great has assured her in a seance was murder rather than an accident.
Very funny first few chapters lead into an intriguing historical mystery which made me wonder when certain names cropped up how it would gel with real events and which was told by a narrator with a consistently amusing “voice“.