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5 novels found

Say Goodbye to Everything

(uk) Robert Graves

232K0

In 1929, Robert Graves went to settle abroad, "deciding never to consider Britain my homeland again." "Farewell to Everything" starts from his childhood and school life, focusing on his experience in the First World War: from the life in the trenches, the death of close friends and even being seriously injured and mistakenly regarded as a "killed man", to the negligence of British government departments and the absurdity of the British hierarchy during the war. He used a relatively brisk, restrained, and slightly ironic writing style to highlight the disorder and disillusionment caused by the war. The book also records his unforgettable interactions with other writers and poets such as Hardy and Sassoon. The two chapters on "Lawrence of Arabia" are impressive and depict the daily life of Lawrence as Graves' loyal friend. This is a classic war memoir, its description of the war on the Western Front is vivid and harrowing; it is also one of the most candid self-portraits of a poet ever. As the Observer commented: "When it first appeared, this book was already recognized as a classic."

The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire: the Life of the Kings

(uk) Robert Graves

287K0

"The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire: The Life of the Kings" is a classic in the historical novel series "The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire" written by the famous British writer Robert Graves. The "Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire" series of books came out in 1934. The books were published by Penguin Press in 1943 and have been popular ever since. In 41 AD, Tiberius Claudius was proclaimed Roman Emperor. He was the fourth emperor of the Julia Claudius dynasty of the Roman Empire. Claudius was regarded as a fool by the entire family, but quietly survived the bloody and cruel political conspiracy. The author of "The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire: The Biography of the Kings" focuses on Claudius as the narrator, recounting the glory, crimes and follies of the early days of the Roman Empire, showing vivid and turbulent scenes, which is worthy of being a majestic picture of Roman history.

The Roman Empire: the Reign of the Gods

(uk) Robert Graves

353K0

The author of "The Roman Empire: The Reign of Gods" borrows the tone of Tiberius Claudius, the fourth emperor of ancient Rome, to narrate the historical stories of this emperor's reign. After the Roman tyrant Caligula was killed, people immediately elected Claudius as emperor. The emperor suffered from polio since he was a child and stuttered. He was always regarded as a fool and laughed at. However, he escaped the suspicion of the tyrant and the political struggle in the palace, allowing him to become a ruler at a relatively old age. The historical Claudius was a historian, and an extremely diligent one. He wrote twenty volumes of the History of Etruria and eight volumes of the History of Carthage, all in Greek, plus an autobiography and a treatise on the Roman alphabet. This novel, written in the tone of a historian, is full of familiar Roman historical stories, as well as court anecdotes and power struggles that are unfamiliar to us. It all chronicles the crimes and follies of the Roman Empire in its early days, as well as its glory. Claudius may have a mediocre personality compared to other Roman emperors, but during his reign, he completely rectified and cleaned up the state of the country that had been messed up by the tyrant Caligula. Moreover, his beautiful little wife Messalina and his successor wife Agrippina the Younger also left a big name in history.

The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire: the Last Consul

(uk) Robert Graves

319K0

"The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire: The Last Consul" The Eastern Roman Empire in the 6th century was full of crises and wars continued. However, whether they were the Vandals, Goths, Persians, or other terrible enemies, they all feared and respected the imperial war commander and outstanding military commander-Belisarius. He conquered the east and west, won many battles, and continued to create amazing military miracles. He was also the last Roman to win the honor of consul and win a victory on the battlefield. In the book, the author Robert Graves borrows the tone of an imperial slave to describe the military and tragic life of General Belisarius in a macroscopic and detailed manner. At the same time, he also gives a very profound and vivid account of the turbulent situation, military expeditions and external expansion, social features, and spiritual and cultural life of the Eastern Roman Empire during the reign of Justinian I.

I, Claudius

(uk) Robert Graves

295K0

Imperial plot × little guy's counterattack is a cool article! Read the century-old history of the rise and fall of the Roman Empire in one book! How did a stuttering "idiot" rise to the top of power step by step in the palace battles of the Roman Empire? Best-selling for 90 years, it is an undisputed masterpiece of historical fiction! "The Grapes of Wrath" and "East of Eden" are carefully translated by translator Wang Yifan. There is no period in the entire history of the West where rhetoric and metaphor are less needed than in ancient Rome, because the facts themselves are appalling enough. Claudius, a nobleman of the Roman Empire, was considered by his family to be nothing more than a stammering fool, but he quietly survived a series of bloody purges and an increasingly cruel environment. He chronicles the reigns of emperors from an outsider's perspective: from the divine Augustus and his poisonous wife Leigh to the madcap atrocities of the sadistic Tiberius and Caligula. Robert Graves brilliantly describes the crazy and debauched history of the Roman Empire in the form of an autobiography.