Cutter's Island: Caesar in Captivity by Vincent Panella

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  • Pub. Date: September 2000
  • 198pp
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    • Pub. Date: September 2000
    • Publisher: Academy Chicago Publishers
    • Format: Hardcover, 198pp

    Publishers Weekly

    Expanding on a single paragraph in Plutarch's life of Caesar, first-time author Panella imagines a turning point in the ambitious but untested young Julius Caesar's life in this vivid short novel, complete with swashbuckling action and classical allusions. The historical record preserves a brief account of the episode: captured by Sicilian pirates as he attempted to fell strife-torn Rome under the dictatorship of Cornelius Sulla, the 25-year-old Caesar vowed to decimate his captors once he escaped. In Panella's account of Caesar's youthful adventure, the already dramatic facts are elaborated upon in blazing detail, with flashes back to Caesar's early career on Rome's violent political scene. Caesar, as Panella tells it, both openly scorned and fascinated his captors, setting the exorbitantly high price of his own ransom, reciting his poetry to them, joining in their banquets and athletic contests and then returning with a fleet to demolish them. Against the factual backdrop of the Republic's colossal heroes and its violent fall, Panella creates a colorful fictional personage in the character of one-handed pirate chief Vatinio, nicknamed Cutter. Cutter's progress from sailor and soldier to gladiator and pirate in the shadow of Pompey the Great's imperial conquests make the pirate chief and Caesar "brothers in history," as the latter finally admits. Taking its cues from Colleen McCullough's energetic Roman chronicles, though narrowing the focus, Panella's opus matches the film Gladiator in its vigorous, viscerally affecting depiction of ancient Rome. (Sept.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

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    Cutter's Island: Caesar in Captivityby Anonymous

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    June 29, 2001: Two historical novels on Julius Caesar were recently released, Vincent Panella?s first-person account, Cutter?s Island: Caesar in Captivity (Academy Press, Chicago, 2000, 197 pages, ISBN 0-89733-484-1), and Patricia Anne Hunter?s omniscient third-person narrative, No Other Caesar (Authors Choice Press, 2001, 224 pages, ISBN 0-595-15778-5). Panella and Hunter take two different approaches to writing a novel about Caesar, each with advantages and disadvantages. Even if you are put off by the fact that, with only 125 pages worth of text, you are paying for a lot of white space, you may still find rewarding Panella?s first-person account of a small but critical stage in the life of Julius Caesar, the time he spent in 75 BC as a captive of the pirates on their secluded island.The telling is vigorous, the characters of Caesar and of the head pirate, Cutter, are well-developed, and the concentration on a single sequence of events is tailored to keep the reader?s interest and understanding growing in tandem. Hunter gives you full value for your money as far as text is concerned, but - given the myriad historical details that she includes in an effort to cover all of Caesar's recorded life - she has understandable difficulty fitting in a full development of characters other than Caesar. She begins with Caesar?s famous intereview with Sulla (?In that boy there?s many a Marius') in 81, when the dictator tried, unsuccessfully, to get Caesar to divorce Cornelia, daughter of Cinna, and she follows him through the rest of his political and military career, right up to the closing scene in the hall of Pompey?s theater on March 15, 44, taken from Suetonius?s Life of Julius Caesar. The penultimate line of the novel is ?Even you, boy?? - rendered by Shakespeare as 'Et tu, Brute?' Both authors are concerned with historical fidelity to ancient evidence. To be sure, both also fill in detail and present characters who are not authentic, but in both works the fictional characters are quite few. Given his narrower focus, Panella involves his characters - especially Caesar, Cutter and, to a lesser extent, Cornelia - in embellished event and dialogue, all sufficiently plausible and based wherever possible on ancient material. Since to focus exclusively on the pirate island would leave the author little opportunity to add variety or to showcase the nuances of Caesar?s character, Panella shows Caesar flashing back to earlier events, including his marriage to Cornelia and his affair with Servilia. In contrast, with her wide sweep, Hunter cannot develop minor characters with the same degree of invention, although she does that quite interestingly for Mark Antony, Labienus, Cleopatra, and Calpurnia. Whereas Panella concentrates on character, Hunter emphasizes historical events. Both authors are also clearly Caesar supporters - a trait which they share with their contemporary, Colleen McCullough, in all of her Roman novels. (Of course, McCullough has written five novels, of which the shortest contains 640 pages, the longest 815.) All three authors' pro-Caesar biases produce a natural tendency to interpret events favorably to their hero. and Panella and Hunter do this consistently throughout their novels, whereas McCullough becomes somewhat negative about Caesar toward the end of her most recent novel and plans at least one more installment in the sequence. Hunter offers some background details that are either incorrect - e.g., orange juice, city...