“Others may fashion more smoothly images of bronze (I for one believe it), evoke living faces from marble, plead causes better, trace with a wand the wanderings of the heavens and foretell the rising of stars. But you, Roman, remember to rule the peoples with power (these will be your arts); impose the habit of […]
Book Review: Rocha’s Treasure of Potosi
Rocha’s Treasure of Potosi tells the story of two men from very different cultures whose paths cross and who become indispensable to each other. Kenwa is a Watusi from Africa, a large and powerful man. He is captured by Portuguese slave traders and brutally transported to South America, ending up in Potosi and forced to […]
Book Review: Sleep of the Innocents
Soledad is a village in an unnamed country in Latin America where life has gone on with little change for centuries. Rosario and her husband, Anibal, eke out a living on a small plot of land. Their income is supplemented by Anibal’s work for Don Rafael, a large landowner, and by Rosario’s talented needlework. Rosario […]
Book Review: The Arms of Quirinus
The Romans left behind written records of their affairs beginning with the founding of the Roman Republic in 509 B.C., but the era of kings is shrouded in myth. In her historical novel, The Arms of Quirinus, Sherrie Siebert Goff has taken these myths and woven an intriguing tale of the founding of Rome. Even […]
Her Majesty’s Will by David Blixt
Writing a novel about William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlow is an audacious venture, but I know of no writer who could pull it off as well as David Blixt. David Blixt is both a Shakespearian actor and a writer of historical fiction. Among his delightful creations are The Lord of Verona and Colossus, Stone and […]
Book Review: Twilight of the Elites:America After Meritocracy by Christopher Hayes
Twilight of the Elites is the most radical book I’ve read in recent years. It explains how our meritocratic system, when taken to its logical conclusion, undermines and destroys the very meritocracy it seeks to create. “America feels broken. Over the last decade, a nation accustomed to greatness has had to reconcile itself to an […]
In The Wake of Hannibal
I have finished my first draft of my new work in progress In the Wake of Hannibal. Gisco was a real person. He traveled with Hannibal on his epic journey across the Pyrenees, through ancient Gaul, over the Alps and into Italy. He was in Hannibal’s inner circle and was with him at the battles […]
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