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Ancient Worlds
Ancient Worlds
Sep 22, 2024 1:29 PM

Author:Richard Miles

Ancient Worlds

Across the Middle East, the Mediterranean and the Nile Delta, awe-inspiring, monstrous ruins are scattered across the landscape - vast palaces, temples, fortresses, shattered statues of ancient gods, carvings praising the eternal power of long-forgotten dynasties. These ruins - the remainder of thousands of years of human civilization - are both inspirational in their grandeur, and terrible in that their once teeming centres of population were all ultimately destroyed and abandoned.

In this major book, Richard Miles recreates these extraordinary cities, ranging from the Euphrates to the Roman Empire, to understand the roots of human civilization. His challenge is to make us understand that the cities which define culture, religion and economic success and which are humanity's greatest invention, have always had a cruel edge to them, building systems that have provided both amazing opportunities and back-breaking hardship.

This exhilarating book is both a pleasure to read and a challenge to us all to think about our past - and about the present.

Reviews

Epic and compelling

—— Daily Mail

Engaging ... full of interesting things about the radical social experiment of the city-state, and the new ways of living it permitted

—— Independent

An epic, spanning five millennia and half the globe

—— Daily Telegraph

Ancient Worlds really does put flesh on the bones of history and Richard Miles brings long lost cities to life

—— Observer

A dazzling account

—— Daily Express

Spiralling stories enliven every page of Jerry White’s magnificent, fully annotated, accessible and scholarly book

—— Tablet

It’s hard to see how a more detailed and readable account of Defoe’s ‘great and monstrous thing’ could be written

—— Time Out

A vast and impressive synthesis ... [a] wonderful panorama

—— Guardian

Magnificent

—— Sunday Telegraph

Magisterial

—— Daily Mail

Hugely compelling...Schiff sifts through gauzy mythology to uncover a brilliant young woman

—— Vogue (US)

[Cleopatra's] first biographers never met her, and she deliberately hid her real self behind vulgar display. A cautious writer would never consider her as a subject. Stacy Schiff, however, has risen to the bait, with deserved confidence ....Schiff's rendering of [Alexandria] is so juicy and cinematic it leaves one with the sense of having visited a hopped-up ancient Las Vegas, with a busy harbor and a really good library....It's dizzying to contemplate the thicket of prejudices, personalities and propaganda Schiff penetrated to reconstruct a woman whose style, ambition and audacity make her a subject worthy of her latest biographer. After all, Stacy Schiff's writing is distinguished by those very same virtues.

—— The New York Times Book Review

Superb...Cleopatra led an epic life, and Schiff captures its sweep and scope in a vigorous narrative aimed at the general reader yet firmly anchored in modern scholarship. The author's greatest strengths remain the lucid intelligence and subtle analysis of personality...Schiff reanimates [Cleopatra] as a living, breathing woman: utterly extraordinary, to be sure, but recognizably human.

—— Los Angeles Times

Stacy Schiff draws a portrait worthy of her subject's own wit and learning...Ms. Schiff manages to tell Cleopatra's story with a balance of the tragic and the hilarious...[and] does a rare thing: She gives us a book we'd miss if it didn't exist.

—— Wall Street Journal

Captivating...Ms. Schiff strips away the accretions of myth that have built up around the Egyptian queen and plucks off the imaginative embroiderings of Shakespeare, Shaw and Elizabeth Taylor. In doing so, she gives us a cinematic portrait of a historical figure far more complex and compelling than any fictional creation, and a wide, panning, panoramic picture of her world....Writing with verve and style and wit, Ms. Schiff recreates Cleopatra's lavish courting of Antony (including one dinner in which there was a knee-deep expanse of roses and some of the attendees received not gift baskets but furniture and horses decked out in silver-plated trappings) and his even more extravagant offerings to her (including the library of Pergamum and a host of territories which gave her dominion over Cyprus, portions of Crete and all but two cities of the thriving Phoenician coast). For that matter, Ms. Schiff even manages to make us see afresh famous scenes like Antony's painful death after his defeat at the hands of Octavian, and Cleopatra's subsequent suicide.

—— The New York Times

A swift, sympathetic life of one of history's most maligned and legendary women.

—— Kirkus
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