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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780007136902
Edition: New edition
ISBN: 0007136900
Label: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Manufacturer: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Number Of Pages: 640
Publication Date: September 01, 2003
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Studio: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
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Editorial Review:Amazon.co.uk Review:The first volume of a sequence of novels about Julius Caesar,
The Gates of Rome is at its best in its scenes of gruelling training in swordplay and dirty fighting. Iggulden's Caesar is more or less fated from the start by his circumstances to be a gifted and cynical player in the great game of Roman senatorial politics--his father is an old-fashioned servant of the public good who dies in a slave revolt. Young Caesar finds himself having to hit the ground running--family alliances throw him onto the losing side in a battle for power between generals Marius and Sulla.
One reservation about Iggulden's story is that he simplifies the pushing and shoving of Rome's two most powerful men to a degree that makes Caesar's choices and loyalties too simple--this is a version of Rome in which politics is only about power and never about ideas. Caesar's friendship with his blood-brother Marcus is too redolent with historical irony--Marcus will be his assassin--and Iggulden is a little novelette-ish in his portrayal of young Caesar's affairs of the heart. This is a competent, routine account of material that deserves better than this handling of it. --
Roz Kaveney
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I enjoy historical fiction and have read quite a lot of books of that genre over the years. The best examples manage to combine an entertaining plot line with historical accuracy when dealing with important historical facts. For me, this book fails on both counts.
Iggulden's plot and writing style are far too simplistic. As for historical accuracy, there are so many glaring errors that I couldn't stop myself from laughing at times. I won't be reading the rest of the series, that's ...
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The one-star reviews of this book are hilarious - fusty, elitist history buffs working themselves into a lather about the lack of historical accuracy! One wonders why they would even pick the book up when they're obviously more at home with a weighty, "serious" tome on the subject. For those of us who want to be entertained, informed and taken on a rollicking roller coaster ride, The Gates of Rome is just the ticket. No-one in their right mind would mistake it for a history book, yet it is informative ...
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As many other reviewers have noted, and as Iggulden himself admitted in the afterword, he took many "liberties" with the facts in this book. Since I don't recall ever reading a book about Julius Caesar's boyhood previously, I was interested in reading it. (It covers age 10 to age 17 or so.)
I had read Iggulden's book about the youth of Genghis Khan and that was a good book in my opinion, very fast paced, interesting, and stayed close to the known facts, as far as I could tell, so that was another ...
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This is probably the most fictional of the series, as this sets the story of our hero from a young boy. As usual Iggulden blends fact and fiction together in such a way that you dont know which is which to create a real page turner of a book, and in the same time giving you an insite into life 2,000 years ago as if it was today
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I wouldn't usually pick up a book in this genre but borrowed it on holiday when I had nothing to read. I was left pleasantly surprised but also slightly dissapointed. Surprised that I quite enjoyed the story - although it is just that, a story. Disappointed because I studied classical history and civilisation for 5 years and Iggulden does not follow historical fact although he is more accurate in the personality of the classical society and what they counted as important in life, and death. However, I will ...
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