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Robert Eckert

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I have degrees in philosophy, law, and mathematics, and lifelong amateur interests in history and linguistics. I won a set of Encyclopedia Brittanicas in 7th grade for an essay on who the speakers of Proto-Indo-European might have been. In the 1970s I transcribed the Tanakh (original Hebrew text of the Old Testament, from the Leningrad Codex) into an ASCII file (with codes for the cantillations as well as vowel-points and consonants): all online Hebrew OTs derive from this file. In 1980 discovered an unexcavated archaeological site in Turkish Kurdistan. At present I tutor statistics and calculus in the Detroit area.

THE YEAR OF FIVE EMPERORS Cover
HISTORICAL FICTION

THE YEAR OF FIVE EMPERORS

BY Robert Eckert • POSTED ON Dec. 7, 2022

Ancient Rome boils with sordid power plays, constant intrigue, full moon rituals, and eruptions of bloodshed in Eckert’s sprawling historical novel.

The author paints a panorama of the Roman Empire in the year 193, starting with the murder of the vile Emperor Commodus by Laetus, commander of the Praetorian Guard, after the leader attempts to rape Laetus’ betrothed. Pertinax is promptly elected emperor by the Senate, and he proves modest and competent but also impolitic and stingy; after he fails to pay the city watchmen their customary bribes, he’s unceremoniously stabbed to death. The Praetorians then massacre the city watch, sell the emperorship to one Didius Julianus for 25 gold pieces per Guardsman, and force the Senate to vote him in at spearpoint. The loathed and inept Julianus tries everything to keep his shaky hold on power, including drinking the blood of a rabbit sacrificed to the goddess Hecate. But powerful rivals—the governors of Britannia and Egypt; the rough-hewn general Septimius Severus—soon try to overthrow him with their legions. Throughout the upheavals, Eckert’s narrative focuses on the household of Sen. Marcus Tullius, his daughter Tullia, and those they’ve enslaved as they navigate a time when a careless comment could get one branded an emperor’s enemy. As it portrays real events (with a few embellishments), Eckert’s tale steeps readers in all things Roman—from wedding ceremonies to military drills to Rome’s traffic jams—and ably dissects a society structured around complex hierarchies and in which survival requires currying favor with the powerful; even casual conversations and actions are calculated for advantage. The author’s vivid, nuanced prose conveys the subtle tensions that besiege his characters as well as the brutality that awaits those who incorrectly parse them: “I order that his lying tongue be torn out by the roots, and that he be hung by his hands from a bar and flogged until death,” declares a judge of the loser in a lawsuit. The result is a captivating page-turner.

An entertaining sword-and-politics saga full of engrossing period detail and sharp drama.

Pub Date: Dec. 7, 2022

ISBN: 9781667873176

Page count: 801pp

Publisher: BookBaby

Review Posted Online: May 25, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2023

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

The Baths of Caracalla

Sequel (nearing completion) to Year of Five Emperors, following the next generation. Septimius Severus has unchallenged power over the Empire and seeks to expand its borders in all directions, but has no power to quell the hatred between his sons. His death during a futile attempt to conquer Scotland leaves his elder son Caracalla free to indulge both his murderous rages, especially against his brother Geta, and his desire to build a lasting memorial to himself.
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