The Triumph of Caesar (Roma Sub Rosa Series #12) by Steven Saylor

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: July 2009
  • 320pp
  • Sales Rank: 18,754
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2009
    • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
    • Format: Paperback, 320pp
    • Sales Rank: 18,754

    Synopsis

    After his New York Times bestselling novel Roma, Saylor returns to his much loved character, Gordianus the Finder, and series for the first new novel in four years - set in the closing days of the Roman Republic, Gordianus searches for the plot that enda

    Publishers Weekly

    At the start of bestseller Saylor's stellar 10th novel in his Roma Sub Rosa series featuring Gordianus the Finder (after 2004's The Judgment of Caesar), Gordianus is at first reluctant to accept a commission from Julius Caesar's wife, Calpurnia, to discover which of the general's many enemies may be plotting her husband's assassination soon after his victory in the Roman civil war. When Calpurnia reveals that the first man she'd hired for the job, Hieronymous, was murdered, the sleuth agrees to help because Hieronymous was an old friend of his. The suspects in Hieronymous's death, who include such prominent figures of the period as Cleopatra and Marc Antony, may well be the ones seeking to kill Caesar. Since the action takes place two years before Caesar's actual death in 44 B.C., there's little suspense about the outcome, but Saylor ably rises to the challenge. The convincing backdrop of daily life in ancient Rome helps make this compelling whodunit a triumph. Author tour. (May)

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    Biography

    Steven Saylor is the author of the New York Times bestselling Roma as well as the previous books in the Roma Sub Rosa series featuring Gordianus the Finder. Saylor's books have been published around the world in twenty languages and been bestsellers in many of them. He divides his time between Berkeley, California and Austin, Texas.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

    Not such a triumph.by Anonymous

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    June 21, 2008: I have thoroughly enjoyed Steven Saylor's 'Roma Sub Rosa' series up to this point. I own the whole series. This latest volume is not on par with the others, even though it was fun to re-enter the world of Gordianus and his family once again. The plot and pacing of this novel simply don't compare to Saylor's other efforts. I found that while I enjoyed Saylor's style and observations as much as ever, I really didn't care whodunit.

    Excellent Ancient Rome whodunitby harstan

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    April 26, 2008: He conquered Gaul, settled the civil war in Egypt by placing Cleopatra on the throne, and won decisive battles in all over Europe, Asia and Africa. For the first time in many years Caesar has come home where he is the Dictator for life. --- Gordianus the Finder has recently returned from Egypt and looks forward to settling into retirement. However his rest is brief because Caesar?s wife Calpurnicus has a job for him. An Etruscan soothsayer who she has complete confidence in says her spouse?s life is in danger she orders Gordianus to find the potential killer. There are four Triumphs (festivals) coming shortly, and those are the most likely moment for someone to strike as Caesar is an easy target during them. The person she had looking for Caesar?s enemy before Gordianus was Hieronymus, a friend of Gordianus, making this assignment personal. --- Two of Steven Saylor?s greatest strengths as an author are his ability to make character seem genuine including real historical persona and to give his audience a sense of time and place readers will feel they are in first century BC Rome. Gordianus enables readers to see through his eyes the jubilation that exists in Rome now that the civil war is over. With a strong who will do it investigative story line, fans will relish the triumph of Saylor. --- Harriet Klausner