Member Reviews
I received an E Arc from Netgalley of this book.
This is the first Agent of Rome novel that I've read, but about the fourth or fifth 'Roman' novel I've read in recent weeks.
This novel is different to all the others as it is entirely fictitious and not reliant on an historical event, or on an important battle. Instead, the story reads a little more like a travelogue through some of the Roman provinces, ending up in Byzantium. For me, this wasn't a particularly thrilling account, concerned rather too much with money, horses and obtaining food and somewhere pleasant to sleep (which seems to have been almost impossible).
The main 'mystery' itself - concerned with three missing girls from a Syrian tribe that one of the main characters has come upon in a previous novel, seemed very thin in places - I felt there was a lot of 'padding' to the story and not actually much story but a lot of travelling and interaction with other Romans who Cassius is trying to avoid - as effectively he's AWOL from his post. This was perhaps done as a literary invention to create some tension to the novel, in which case, I don't think it was very successful.
The sub-plot, concerned with Cassius finding his missing bodyguard, is given little room in the novel - just the odd chapter here and there told from the missing man's point of view - and the eventual reason for the kidnapping of his bodyguard is not so much far-fetched, as downright disappointing, and his eventual discovery is accomplished incredibly quickly in the end and without any great drama.
Overall, I find the novel to be enjoyable but not riveting and although I read it quite quickly, some of that was down to simple perseverance. Perhaps I would have done better to start with an earlier book in the series but I'm not sure that Cassius, with all his arrogance, will ever quite be my idea of any sort of hero.