Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Imperium

by Robert Harris

Bestselling British author Harris (Pompeii; Engima) returns to ancient Rome for this entertaining and enlightening novel of Marcus Cicero's rise to power. Narrated by a household slave named Tiro, who actually served as Cicero's "confidential secretary" for 36 years, this fictional biography follows the statesman and orator from his early career as an outsider - a "new man" from the provinces - to his election to the consulship, Rome's highest office, in 64 BC. Loathed by the aristocrats, Cicero lived by his wits in a tireless quest for imperium - the ultimate power of life and death - and achieved "his life's ambition" after uncovering a plot by Marcus Crassus and Julius Caesar to rig the elections and seize control of the government.

Harris's description of Rome's labyrinthine, and sometimes deadly political scene is fascinating and instructive, and the action is relentless.

-- from Publisher's Weekly

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