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Oh my, there have been books that have been in my library, survived a purge, moved around the country, but are still in my library and for a reason. And complete with an autograph from the esteemed Colleen McCullough, I have just completed The First Man In Rome. In the Author’s Note, Ms. McCullough tells us that she is a one-woman band. In her words, “I have done my own research, executed the maps and drawings myself and written my own glossary.” And what a magnificent job she did. As one who doesn’t know a lot about early Roman history, this book was a joy as I was swept into a dramatic world of political intrigue, danger, wars, assassinations, devastating upheaval, and intricately passionate family alliances and rivalries.
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The First Man in Rome is the story of Marius Gaius’s rise to power in the Roman Republic, a wealthy rustic barred by his low birth from grasping his destiny, to become the First Man in Rome. His friendship with Sulla, a handsome young man from an impeccably aristocratic house, prevented by penury from claiming his birthright. These two men were brought together by war in dark and distant lands as they battle enemies of Rome and within Rome as they pursue their quest to become The First Man in Rome. This book takes place over eleven years from 110 B.C through 100 B.C. This beautiful book is rich with historical detail, including the house of Julius Caesar and his two beautiful daughters, prominent in the storyline. It is good that this series, Masters of Rome survived my downsizing. And now I am happily off to the second book in the series, The Grass Crown.
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“The First Man in Rome was not the best man; he was the first among other men who were his equals in rank and opportunity. And to be the First Man in Rome was something better than kingship, autocracy, despotism, call it what you would. The First Man in Rome held on to that title by sheer pre-eminence, perpetually aware that his world was stuffed with others eager to supplant him—others who could supplant him, legally and bloodlessly, by producing a superior brand of pre-eminence. To be the first man in Rome was more than being consul; consuls came and went at the rate of two a year.Where as the centuries of Roman Republic passed, only the smallest handful of men would come to be hailed as The First Man in Rome.”n
The First Man in Rome is the story of Marius Gaius’s rise to power in the Roman Republic, a wealthy rustic barred by his low birth from grasping his destiny, to become the First Man in Rome. His friendship with Sulla, a handsome young man from an impeccably aristocratic house, prevented by penury from claiming his birthright. These two men were brought together by war in dark and distant lands as they battle enemies of Rome and within Rome as they pursue their quest to become The First Man in Rome. This book takes place over eleven years from 110 B.C through 100 B.C. This beautiful book is rich with historical detail, including the house of Julius Caesar and his two beautiful daughters, prominent in the storyline. It is good that this series, Masters of Rome survived my downsizing. And now I am happily off to the second book in the series, The Grass Crown.