Count Belisarius (Penguin Classics) |
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Author:
Robert Graves
By Penguin Classics
Average Customer Rating:     
List Price: £12.99
Our Price: £7.44
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Binding: Paperback EAN: 9780141188133 ISBN: 0141188138 Label: Penguin Classics Manufacturer: Penguin Classics Number Of Pages: 448 Publication Date: 2006-08-03 Publisher: Penguin Classics Studio: Penguin Classics |
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    Great, 2005-06-20 I haven't read a book this good for years. It is the type of book that you thought the Twentieth Century incapable of producing. Graves manages to capture the tone and character of an authentic history from the Ancient World. The years of being steeped in the Classics as a scholar has allowed him to maintain this voice from that era so consistently and with a feeling of authenticity. This is, in my opinion, the book's greatest achievement. It could stand alongside Herodotus and Themistocles (in translation at least). Graves gives an epic and moving portrait of an unique man, his surroundings, his actions and his intimates. This book actually takes us to the Euphrates with Belisarius and his army, to the walls of Rome and to the corrupt and violent world of Constantinople and the Hippodrome: and I don't know how it does so quite so effectively as it is not a book that is overly-descriptive. Like those earlier great works of history, it uses simple, straightforward language to achieve this strong feeling about the setting. It is gripping, enjoyable and, as I said, moving novel.
    The truth? No, but a cracking good read..., 2007-02-22 The story of Count Belisarius takes place at a time unfamiliar to most readers - after the Roman Empire moved east to Constantinople; after the Goths swept across Italy and sacked then occupied Rome; when the language of the Empire was Greek, rather than Latin; and when stasis in the Senate had been replaced by the factional politics of the Hippodrome mob.
Count Belisarius was published in 1938, some three years after Graves' more famous fictional accounts of the life and times of the Roman Emperor Claudius: I Claudius, and Claudius The God. These earlier works were based primarily on the scandalous (and salacious) account of the lives of the Emperors Augustus to Nero provided in Suetonius' Lives of the Twelve Caesars.
And so also with Count Belisarius. Taking liberal chunks from the contemporary scandal sheets (mainly Procopius of Caesarea's Secret History), and taking its style from Tacitus' Agricola, Graves' Belisarius is portrayed as a great, noble general thwarted and ultimately betrayed by the jealousy of an Emperor (in this case Justinian, not Domitian). He is a man who holds on to his virtue in a world going bad and rife with corruption.
Count Belisarius is a work of fiction, not of history. But, like the best historical novels, it displays such a depth of knowledge that its readers (unless they are very well read indeed) are certain to be become better informed in the course of their entertainment. This is not to say that it is a classic work of high art. Like Graves' earlier treatment of the Claudian dynasty, Count Belisarius is part soap opera, part gossip column and part hagiography. It is, however, a cracking good read, as well as being very articulate and erudite - an almost unheard of combination of attributes in an historical novel.
For all its obvious virtues, though, Count Belisarius raises questions on its own account, in addition to those of its sources. Those familiar with I Claudius will recognise the uncritical way that Graves has transcribed the formulaic criticism ancient authors often levelled at leaders and Emperors - that they were either dominated or cuckolded by their wives. Graves has softened the harshness of Procopius' judgement of the relationships between Belisarius and Antonia and Justinian and Theodora, but eventually allows it to stand. Like Tacitus' Agricola, Count Belisarius is a tale told in black and white, with the foils to Belisarius' purity and nobility being the most ignoble, disreputable, cowardly and incompetent scoundrels ever to grace literature. Whether these characters pass the test of modern literary subtlety is open to some question.
But I defy you not to enjoy Count Belisarius. Graves may not, in the end, have thought much of his "historical pot boilers", but he is in a minority. This is a excellent, rewarding and enjoyable novel.
    Superb historical novel, 2001-10-24 It is several years since I read this book, but it still lingers in my memory. Robert Graves uses all his skill as a novellist to bring alive the Belisarius, the Byzantium general who briefly revived the fortunes of the Eastern empire. What is particularly memorable about the book is the way Graves makes Belisarius so sympathetic, that you come to empathise strongly with him. I wept over Belisarius's tragic end. One of only two books that has ever affected me like that. Powerful stuff, and far superior to your average historical novel.
    The Last Roman, 1999-08-25 In this Novel Graves Brings Alive Count Belisarius, Showing his motivations and thinking as told from the perspective of a household eunoch. It's a Splendid Tale of the Death throes of a civilization and one man (and His Wife) who tried to hold back the Tide of darkness that swept over the Roman world. Really does rank along side I,Claudius as a great novel.
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