The Julio-Claudian family possessed all the brutality and dysfunctionality of the Sopranos, but with fewer (or no) constraints on their power to injure outsiders or each other. From this raw material Robert Graves brilliantly recreates a world of power, intrigue and cruelty, a world permeated through and through with the threat of sudden and violent death. In the process he raises striking, sometimes unanswerable questions: was Tiberius really as depraved as Suetonius suggests? Was Livia the true power behind Augustus' throne? And did she really poison all those people? Did Caligula seriously plan to make his horse a consul? Whether or not we can answer these questions, this was certainly a world in which such things could happen.
With an Afterword by Tom Griffith.
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
ISBN: 9781907360800
Number of pages: 600
Weight: 313 g
Dimensions: 157 x 100 x 28 mm
Read this on the back of the Robert Harris Rome books and i'm glad I did. Extremely interesting period well presented and accessible though the narrative, hard to believe that it is 80 years old this year. I aim... More
I read this on a Sony PRS-300.
The formatting of this book is really awful. The margins are enormous and the indented quotations are much too far in, and as a result they often overflow, splitting lines inelegantly...
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One of the best book ever written, should I ever end up on "Desert Island discs", this owuld be my one book
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