|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
Judge Severus returns in "The Cyclops Case." The year is now 161
CE, three years after the events in the highly acclaimed and best
selling historical mystery "Mars the Avenger." The philosopher
emperor Marcus Aurelius has been emperor for only a few months and
Persia has invaded the Roman Empire. Marcus Flavius Severus, Judge
in the Court of the Urban Prefect in the City of Rome is on
vacation at the Bay of Naples with his family. This is the ancient
Roman riviera, the Crater, famous for combining rampant
pleasure-seeking and high culture with license and corruption.
There, one night on the beach, the notorious General Cyclops, who
is slated for recall to the army, has been stabbed through his good
eye. Severus is assigned by the authorities in Rome to investigate.
The Cyclops case launches Severus into a web of murder, robbery and
counterfeiting, ranging in time from the Second Jewish Revolt 30
years in the past to Severus' present. It also puts him in the
middle of an espionage duel involving the Roman and Persian secret
services and leads to a series of killings which, like General
Cyclops', are reminiscent of scenes out of Homer's Odyssey.
Ironically, solving a murder leads to more murders to solve. As in
"Mars the Avenger," "The Cyclops Case" is both a mystery and a
daily life of ancient Rome, a sojourn into the world of Roman life
and courts, police and criminal law. The investigation takes
Severus and his aides into the society of Romans at their leisure.
Scenes are set, among other places, in wealthy summer villas, a
gambling hall and a brothel at the Crater to a bookstore, tenement
apartment house and secret service headquarters in Rome. There are
also scenes in Roman courts and the book is accurate as to the
criminal laws of the time. All laws, rescripts and legal procedures
are derived from Roman law sources, which are extensive for the 2nd
Century CE.
"Mars the Avenger" is an historical mystery set in the year 158 CE,
during the reign of Antoninus Pius, a period often called the
height of the Roman Empire. It is also a daily life in ancient Rome
and a sojourn into the world of Roman life, criminal law, police
and courts. Marcus Flavius Severus, a judge in the court of the
Prefect of the City of Rome, investigates the disappearance of a
senator's wife and the finding of the body of a murdered man thrown
on the steps of the Temple of Mars the Avenger. As the
investigation unfolds, the two cases become connected to a love
affair seventeen years before in the Roman orient. The
investigation leads Judge Severus and his court and police aids
through the City and the society of ancient Rome, into a slave
market, wealthy villas, taverns, tenement apartment houses and the
Circus Maximus. There are also scenes in Roman courts and the book
is accurate as to the criminal laws of the time, including the use
of judicial torture. All laws, rescripts and legal procedures are
from Roman law sources. The novel also introduces a perspicacious
new detective in the person of Roman judge Marcus Flavius Severus.
Roman Stoicism and Seneca's letters provide a philosophy of
retirement, a philosophy of old age, and a philosophy of death -
timeless wisdom for the final years of life.
|
|