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Steven Saylor : Rubicon: A Novel of Ancient Rome (Novels of Ancient Rome)
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Author: Steven Saylor
Title: Rubicon: A Novel of Ancient Rome (Novels of Ancient Rome)
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Binding: Paperback
Pages: 320
Date: 2010-05-25
ISBN: B004P5OPNE
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Weight: 0.6 pounds
Size: 5.4 x 8.2 x 0.9 inches
Edition: 1 Reprint
Amazon prices:
$3.57used
$21.14new
Previous givers: 1 Craig Birker (USA: CA)
Previous moochers: 1 NickD (USA: IL)
Wishlists:
3Alicia (USA: MN), Bertilak de Hautdesert (USA: PA), Debra & Jerry (USA: FL).
Description: Product Description
As Caesar marches on Rome and panic erupts in the city, Gordianus the Finder discovers, in his own home, the body of Pompey's favorite cousin. Before fleeing the city, Pompey exacts a terrible bargain from the finder of secrets-to unearth the killer, or sacrifice his own son-in-law to service in Pompey's legions, and certain death. Amid the city's sordid underbelly, Gordianus learns that the murdered man was a dangerous spy. Now, as he follows a trail of intrigue, betrayal, and ferocious battles on land and sea, the Finder is caught between the chaos of war and the terrible truth he must finally reveal.
     Rubicon, set in early days of the Roman Civil War, is a pivotal novel in Saylor's bestselling and critically acclaimed series of novels set in late Republican Rome.


Amazon.com Review
Steven Saylor's seventh installment in his Roma Sub Rosa series begins with a character saying, "Pompey will be mightily pissed." Scholars might argue that there is no evidence of this particular synonym for anger ever being used in 49 B.C., but the author would no doubt respond that poetic license includes doing whatever it takes to bridge the gap for modern audiences. And indeed, the head of the Roman Senate is mightily pissed. Rome is on the verge of another civil war, and the forces of Julius Caesar and Mark Antony have crossed the Rubicon River and are marching toward the capital. To top it all off, one of Pompey's favorite cousins has been garroted to death.

Before Pompey flees the city, he asks Rome's greatest detective, Gordianus the Finder, to solve the murder. But Pompey has reason to distrust Gordianus, who may have an allegiance with Caesar. To force his loyalty, Pompey seizes the detective's son-in-law, and makes him join his household army. By doing so, he ensures that Gordianus's involvement in the coming conflict will be a very personal one. Confused and troubled, Gordianus walks through Rome toward the house of his former friend and mentor, the poet Cicero. "All around me, I felt the uneasiness of the city, like a sleeper in the throes of a nightmare." Awakening from the nightmare, surviving the chaos, and solving this whodunit will be the Finder's toughest battle yet. --Dick Adler

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