Rome's Lost Son
- Pages
- 368
- Langue
- EN
- ISBN
- 9780857899668
- Temps de Lecture
- ~6h 27min
Rome's Lost Son est un book de Robert Fabbri. Il compte 368 pages.
À propos de ce livre
The sixth installment in Robert Fabbri's epic Vespasian seriesRome, AD 51: Vespasian brings Rome's greatest enemy before the Emperor. After eight years of resistance, the British warrior Caratacus has been caught. But even Vespasian's victory cannot remove the newly-made consul from Roman politics: Agrippina, Emperor Claudius's wife, pardons Caratacus. Claudius is a drunken fool and Narcissus and Pallas, his freedmen, are battling for control of his throne. Separately, they decide to send Vespasian East to Armenia to defend Rome's interests. But there is more at stake than protecting a client kingdom. Rumors abound that Agrippina is involved in a plot to destabilise the East. Vespasian must find a way to serve two masters—Narcissus is determined to ruin Agrippina, Pallas to save her. Meanwhile, the East is in turmoil. A new Jewish cult is flourishing and its adherents refuse to swear loyalty to the Emperor. In Armenia, Vespasian is captured. Immured in the oldest city on earth, how can he escape? And is a Rome ruled by a woman who despises Vespasian any safer than a prison cell?
À propos de l'auteur
est l'auteur de Rome's Lost Son. Parcourez son catalogue complet sur Booklogr.
Explorez plus de livres de Robert Fabbri →Éditions et Formats
Critiques
Pas encore de critiques. Avez-vous lu ce livre ? Partagez vos impressions avec la communauté Booklogr.
Se connecter Connectez-vous pour écrire une critique
Questions Fréquentes
Combien de pages fait Rome's Lost Son ?+
Rome's Lost Son compte 368 pages.
De quoi parle Rome's Lost Son ?+
The sixth installment in Robert Fabbri's epic Vespasian seriesRome, AD 51: Vespasian brings Rome's greatest enemy before the Emperor. After eight years of resistance, the British warrior Caratacus has been caught. But even Vespasian's victory cannot remove the newly-made consul from Roman politics: ...
Qui a écrit Rome's Lost Son ?+
Rome's Lost Son a été écrit par Robert Fabbri.