
Dictator
A Novel
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Narrado por:
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David Rintoul
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De:
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Robert Harris
Imperium . . . Conspirata . . . and now Dictator—the long-awaited final volume of Robert Harris’s magnificent Ancient Rome Trilogy
At the age of forty-eight, Cicero—the greatest orator of his time—is in exile, separated from his wife and children, tormented by his sense of failure, his great power sacrificed on the altar of his principles. And yet, in the words of one of his most famous aphorisms, “While there is life, there is hope.”
By promising to support Caesar—his political enemy—he is granted return to Rome. There, he fights his way back to prominence: first in the law courts, then in the Senate, and finally by the power of his pen, until at last, for one brief and glorious period, he is again the preeminent statesman in the city. Even so, no public figure, however brilliant and cunning, is completely safeguarded against the unscrupulous ambition and corruption of others.
Riveting and tumultuous, Dictator encompasses some of the most epic events in ancient history—the collapse of the Roman Republic and the subsequent civil war, the murder of Pompey, the assassination of Julius Caesar. But the central problem it presents is a timeless one: how to keep political freedom unsullied by personal ambition, vested interests, and the erosive effects of ceaseless, senseless foreign wars. In Robert Harris’s indelible portrait, Cicero attempts to answer this question with both his thoughts and his deeds, becoming a hero—brilliant, flawed, frequently fearful yet ultimately brave—both for his own time and for ours.
©2016 Robert Harris (P)2016 Random House AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















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One of the Best Books of the Year: The Guardian, The Herald (Scotland), The Sunday Times (London), and The Spectator
“Harris is incapable of writing an unenjoyable book. . . . He captures the senselessness of triumviral intrigue magnificently, not relenting as the players meet their gruesome ends.” —Maxwell Carter, The Wall Street Journal
“To render convincingly a period as remote as that of Cicero’s is a stiff challenge for a novelist to meet, but it is the measure of Harris’s achievement that we experience a 2,000-year-old crisis as though we were reading about it in a contemporary memoir. . . . Yet the real triumph of Dictator is how successfully it channels what is perhaps the supreme fascination of ancient Rome: the degree to which it is at once eerily like our own world and yet profoundly alien. The challenges faced by Cicero will be recognizable to many a contemporary senator: welfare dependency; the legacy of illegal wars; anxiety that a venerable constitution is no longer fit for its purpose. . . . If it is indeed a mirror that Dictator holds up to the present, then the reflections it offers are unsettling and admonitory. This is historical fiction that is the very opposite of escapist.” —Tom Holland, The New York Times Book Review
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Outstanding narrator
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political drama
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Simply Superb
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Julius Caesar redux
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In listening to this entire series, Harris seems to imply that the Roman Republic was doomed, the only question being by whose hand it would fall - by Caesar, Pompey, Catalina, Antony or Clodius. The intrigues that are so integral to this story are fascinating, a real life Game of Thrones. Told through the eyes of Tiro, the story is able to reveal character flaws and even strengths in all of the main characters. Cicero attempts to navigate through all of the moves of the various schemers and paradoxically he ultimately contributes to the final dissolution of the Republic and to the beginnings of the Roman Empire.
Dictator is a fitting end to the trilogy. It is thrilling, informative and one of the best books that I have listened to in quite a while. If you enjoy Roman History, I would strongly recommend this book as well as the other two books in the series (Imperium & Conspirata). Well worth the credit.
Outstanding
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Such an amazing book
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Awesome Awesome series
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Fantastic book and great performance
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I kept slowing down the pace of my listening as I progressed through the trilogy to savor each phase of the narrative....
What a story, what a time and what a magnificent character Cicero is!!
I've already listened to Imperium a second time - with the myriad characters in the story much more recognizable the second time around!
There were so many times I would pause and narrate an anecdote from the books to my wife, son, neighbor or colleague. My favorite (but not so important in the scheme of things) story thread is the one of Cicero and his house on Palantine Hill.
Truly enjoyed it - bravo!!
Awesome trilogy!
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Adequate sequel to Conspirata & Imperium
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