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Alexander: The Virtues Of War
Alexander: The Virtues Of War
Apr 28, 2025 5:34 PM

Author:Steven Pressfield

Alexander: The Virtues Of War

Steven Pressfield, author of the Sunday Times bestseller Gates of Fire, brings us an intimate and revealing portrayal of Alexander the Great: legendary hero and leader of men.

"A cracking, fast-paced contemporary retelling of the legend that is Alexander" - MANDA SCOTT

"An all conqueringly glamorous an account as Alexander himself" -- SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE

"Deeply researched, dashingly written...this is a terrific performance" -- INDEPENDENT

"Nothing short of an excellent read" - ***** Reader review

"This was simply beautiful, 100% recommended, there was a literal lump in my throat when I came to the end, absolutely glorious." -- ***** Reader review

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EVERYTHING IS THERE FOR THE TAKING

He ascended to the throne of Macedon at the age of nineteen.

He conquered the seemingly invincible Persian Empire before he was twenty-five.

He died at the age ofthirty-two, undefeated by any enemy.

His reputation as a warrior and leader of men remains unsurpassed in the annals of history. We remember him as Alexander the Great...

Epic in scope and magisterial in tone, Steven Pressfield's breathtaking novel tells the story of this legendary colossus of the ancient world who was driven - and ultimately undone - by his insatiable lust for glory.

Reviews

'Wonderfully-imagined...Richly atmospheric, stunningly graphic, intense and extraordinary'

—— NELSON DEMILLE

'A cracking, fast-paced contemporary re-telling of the legend that is Alexander ... Pressfield brings him alive for the modern audience with the verve and skill with which he conjured the heroes of Thermopylae in Gates of Fire.'

—— MANDA SCOTT

'If you want to know what it might have felt like to ride into battle with Alexander, read this striking book...blends a scholar's accuracy and a novelist's eye.'

—— BARRY STRAUSS, author of Salamis

'Pressfield has tackled a subject worthy of his enormous talent...and triumphed again.'

—— STEPHEN COONTS

'Deeply researched, dashingly written...this is a a terrific performance'

—— INDEPENDENT

'As all-conqueringly glamorous an account as Alexander himself'

—— SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE , DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Books of the Year'

'The acclaimed chronicler of Ancient Greek warriors tells of the mightiest of all...Pressfield succeeds quite brilliantly where a lesser novelist might stumble, enabling the legend to meet the man... [he] excels in depicting the blood, guts, glory and shame'

—— GOOD BOOK GUIDE

A beguiling and resonant novel of ideas. The action is vivid and absorbing...although this intergenerational family drama is plotted like a thriller, it's also a novel of ideas, throwing light on the strange dance between religion and science.

—— Cameron Woodhead , Melbourne Age

Beautiful...Farndale's elegant prose, his storytelling ability and the wise tolerance with which he views...his characters lend his exhilarating novel a tenderly redemptive afterimage.

—— Jane Shilling , Sunday Telegraph

It makes exhilarating reading, all the better for its satirical edge.

—— The Tablet

Love, terrorism, plane crashes, Passchendaele, religious visions... The highest compliment one can pay Farndale... is that the material is so well marshalled that the narrative unfurls without strain....beautifully done.

—— Mail on Sunday

Philosophically ambitious and deftly crafted, Nigel Farndale's novel has one leg planted in the trenches of the First World War and the other placed sure-footedly in the present...perspicacious observations of human behaviour... beautiful.

—— Country Life

A constantly engaging and witty novel from a tremendously clever writer.

—— Telegraph

Plausiby drawn....strong central characters, interesting subplots and well-sketched minor characters.

—— TLS

As idiosyncratic as it is ambitious...given shape and purpose by a true literary craftsman. The book both keeps you reading and makes you think.

—— Sally Cousins , Sunday Telegraph

I drank in Nigel Farndale's The Blasphemer in huge lungfuls, and mourned it when it was finished. For anyone who loved Saturday, Atonement or Birdsong, this is the generational novel at its best.

—— Mail on Sunday
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