"McCULLOUGH IS TERRIFIC. ..
HER CHARACTERS QUIVER WITH LIFE."
The New York Tunes Book Review
BEFORE THE ROMAN REPUBLlC WAS HIS …
HER NOBLEWOMEN WERE CAESAR'S GREATEST CONQUEST.
His victories ries were legend-in battle and bedchamber alike. And love was a political weapon he wielded cunningly and ruthlessly in his private war against enemies in the forum. From the daughter he deigned to sacrifice on the altar of ambition and the wives
who bought him injluence to the cold-hearted mistress he burned for but could never trust, Caesar's women ali knew his power …
But only one would seal his fate.
From Colleen McCullough-the acclaimed New York Times bestselling author of The Thom Birds-comes an epic and remarkable saga of great events, intrigues and personages; the story of Gaius Julius Caesar-the brilliant, beloved patrician who was history-and the women he adored, used, and destroyed on his irresistible rise to prominence.
(tovább)
"McCULLOUGH IS TERRIFIC. ..
HER CHARACTERS QUIVER WITH LIFE."
The New York Tunes Book Review
BEFORE THE ROMAN REPUBLlC WAS HIS …
HER NOBLEWOMEN WERE CAESAR'S GREATEST CONQUEST.
His victories ries were legend-in battle and bedchamber alike. And love was a political weapon he wielded cunningly and ruthlessly in his private war against enemies in the forum. From the daughter he deigned to sacrifice on the altar of ambition and the wives
who bought him injluence to the cold-hearted mistress he burned for but could never trust, Caesar's women ali knew his power …
But only one would seal his fate.
From Colleen McCullough-the acclaimed New York Times bestselling author of The Thom Birds-comes an epic and remarkable saga of great events, intrigues and personages; the story of Gaius Julius Caesar-the brilliant, beloved patrician who was history-and the women he adored, used, and destroyed on his irresistible rise to prominence.
„McCULLOUGH IS ON FIRE Caesar is one of her strongest and most fascinating characters The deterrnined reader is rewarded with a deep under standing of the personal, political and sexual intrigue that made up the fabric of Roman life.”
San Francisco Chronicle