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Bezig met laden... Lustrum (2009)door Robert Harris
Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Grandioos tweede deel van Cicero- trilogie. Over zijn consulaat en de ondergang ervan. Politieke thriller van het hoogste niveau. ( ) Cicero blijft overeind als verdediger van de democratie, zoals die er toen uitzag. Maar Harris schetst ook een ander beeld dan dat van de rots in de branding. Hij toont ook de ijdele Cicero, overtuigd van zijn eigen gelijk, steeds bereid tot duistere akkoorden in de achterkamers, zelfs als hij daarvoor zijn vrienden moet verraden. Harris beschrijft de trucs en handigheden die ook in de hedendaagse politiek nooit ver weg zijn. Alleen al daarom is Lustrum lezen een must. Volledige bespreking via http://wraakvandedodo.blogspot.com/2010/01/robert-harris-lustrum.html
Harris provides through Lustrum great insight into this exciting period of Roman history not only by echoing historical sources but by numerous psychologic zooms: a glimpse or a blink of an eye here, a whisper or a rumor there, and over all the ancient truth of evil omen. "Harris, whose previous novels include “Pompeii” and the World War II thriller “Enigma,” doesn’t take the path of many other writers of historical fiction and provide copious, painstaking descriptions of meals, wardrobes, palaces and the like to summon a long-ago, far-away past." Over the two millennia since his death Cicero has been many things to many readers – authoritarian, pedant, vacillator, self-doubting philosophical sceptic. Each generation makes its own Rome and its own Romans, and Harris's version of this endlessly fascinating figure is richly and generously enjoyable. I look forward to the conclusion of the trilogy. For all its political insights, though, it is as a pure thriller that Lustrum stands or falls. In that respect, it succeeds splendidly. It may not be the best novel written about ancient Rome – I still prefer Gore Vidal and Allan Massie – but it is a damn good one: wry, clever, thoughtful, with a terrific sense of timing and eye for character. And even though I knew how the story ended, I found myself turning the pages faster and faster, a tribute not only to the intrinsic fascination of these extraordinary events, but also to the narrative skills of a master craftsman. Lustrum is a serious piece of storytelling, enormously enjoyable to read, with an insider’s political tone. Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Cicero (2)
On the eve of Marcus Cicero's inauguration as consul of Rome, the grisly death of a boy sends ripples of fear thourgh a city already wracked by civil unrest, crime, and debauchery of every kind. For Cicero, the ill forebodings of this hideous murder only increase his frustrations and the dangers he already faces as Rome's leader: elected by the people but despised by the heads of the two rival camps, the patricians and populists. There is, also a plot to assassinate him, and it will take all his embattled wit, strength, and force of will to stop it and keep Rome from becoming a dictatorship. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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