Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

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Pride of Carthage
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OCTOBER 2013 (Group Read 1) Pride of Carthage by David Anthony Durham
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Nate
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Oct 11, 2013 03:49AM

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That's interesting. I'm fascinated by pretty much all things ancient Rome yet I still like to see them lose. The utter panic that Lake Trasimene and Cannae must have caused in the Senate would truly be something to witness. All those pompous patricians soiling their togas :D

That's interesting. I'm fascinated by pretty much..."
That is certainly true, on the other hand common Italians behaved quite well under the threat of Hannibal (not gonna continue so there are no spoilers). Anyway, I think it is the whole issue with the culture for me again. It was not presented enough so I could not identify with it (what values do they stand for? Vengeance, pre-emptive action? I would need more description of what happened to the father and someone being haunted by it to understand vengeance. Glory? Description of some code of honour was missing... Seems like ambition, but it is not described well...), and Hannibal the way he is portrayed is just a shadow of Alexander. Also, I still have this slight cringey feeling when I read Carthaginian calling somebody else a barbarian. :) I am starting to like the other characters more tho, so I'll see how it's going to develop...



You're absolutely right. Here's an excerpt from the section of the book where Hannibal is responding to Hasdrubal's question of if the war is really necessary:
"You ask an honest question, and in answer to it I will speak of two points. Yes, I do hate them. I had the joy of spending more years with our father than any of his sons. He burned with a hatred for the Romans. They have robbed us of so much. They are treacherous and remorseless and cunning. I believe our father to have been among the wisest of men. He hated Rome; I do as well."
He continues, "But I'm no fool. Hatred is to harness, not to be harnessed by. I wouldn't attack Rome simply out of hate. The truth is we've no choice. The Romans have a hunger different from any the world has yet seen. I have many spies among them. They bring me the pieces of a puzzle I've been fitting together for some time now. I have enough of it clear before me to know that Rome will never let us be. Perhaps they'd allow us five years of peace, perhaps ten or fifteen, but soon they'd come for us again. They grow stronger yearly, Hasdrubal. If we don't fight them now, on our terms, we will fight them later, on theirs. Father knew this as well and schooled me in it while young. Nothing he said on this matter has proved mistaken. We all want power, yes. Riches, yes. Slaves to satisfy us. Carthage is no different. But in their secret hearts the Romans desire more than just these things. They dream of being masters of the entire world. Masters of something intangible, beyond mere power or riches. They'll settle for nothing less. In such a dream, you and I would be slaves."
I loved this part and found it very telling.

I would recommend this book.


I am never pro Roman. I avoid Roman perspective novels and love to see the Romans 'get theirs'. ;)

Such a powerful passage. Especially that last line
"They'll settle for nothing less. In such a dream, you and I would be slaves".

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Terri, Wyrd bið ful aræd
(last edited Oct 12, 2013 07:51PM)
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rated it 4 stars


Oh, he has fantasy stuff too? I was wondering about his other work. I'll have to check that out. If it's as good as this book it's an easy sell for me. I've always been one of the people that holds that historical fiction and fantasy are kindred genres.
Man....What a great, beautifully written book. I can't say enough good things about it. I've just finished..so I should probably let it sink in...but right now, I'm tempted to call it one of the best books that I've ever read. I could go on & on..but I won't. I don't want to spoil it for anyone else. It clicked perfectly with me.
I want to thank this group. I'm quite certain that if I weren't a member here, I would have never even heard of this book. It moved me...
I want to thank this group. I'm quite certain that if I weren't a member here, I would have never even heard of this book. It moved me...
I wish Durham would write more in the ancient HF genre. It would probably be hard to top this book, in my eyes anyway, but I wish he'd try!

Oh that is just so wonderful! :D
I am really pleased to see you appreciate it this much. I always say it is one of my favourite reads too, only I have the contradiction of giving it 4 stars. I couldn't give it 5 because for me it lost me a couple times, but overall, I loved the book. Would read it again one day (when I don't have so many books sitting here in front of me to read) and I will always recommend it to HF readers that I regards as 'thinkers'. :)

@Bryn: That's what I do not understand, why they see Rome as so utterly bad for the world. Carthage does not seem to be any better, actually it seems to be even worse (with the genocides against the whole cities etc.). Hence Hannibal's surprise (view spoiler) Hannibal is basically saying: "we need to obliterate Rome because they are too much like us, and probably better in it" :).
@Terri: well, I also generally like the underdog... On the other hand, what I love about Romans is their pragmatism and no nonsense attitude. I agree that their ambition is quite annoying tho. That's why I love Harry Sidebottom's Ballista - he is Roman in his pragmatism, but he is also an outsider and therefore he lacks the ambition and narcissism.

I tend to agree, though I'm still trying to figure out why. I think it partly has to do with the author taking us to a different world?

I tend to agree, though I'm still trying to figure out why. I think it partly has..."
I agree too....but these are my top two genres.


In all fairness, I think it is most likely the Carthaginians were interested in an empire like Rome. They dominated the African sphere, and I think had they successfully crushed Roman power, would have spread through Mediterranean Europe. After all, they already had Iberia (Spain)


Noted :).

In any case, I am finally done with the book. The form almost killed me. And it's a pity because I am sure I would enjoy the book on second reading. But who has time for that...

I've heard it argued, and I tend to agree, that in a military sense Hannibal lacked strategic skill. He was a brilliant tactician, in that he could defeat the Romans in nearly every battle he was in. But when it came down to his overall war strategy, he failed. He didn't have a clearly defined end-game in mind, beyond the ruination of Rome. He could win battles, but he couldn't defeat Rome. I'm still noodling through how any of that plays into this novel. I think it does, which makes it, in my mind, even more powerful.

.."
exactly! Rereading is a luxury I can ill afford. I see you suffer the same problem.


We all have so many unread books to get to, we will hardly ever have time in our reading schedules to reread.

But, the books most important to me, I've read 5+ times. Better to read them five times and extract everything I can, than to read four others that aren't going to mean a fraction as much to me. That was my old thinking, I'm not sure I'm living up to it these days.


I reread maybe once a year.


I know I am a bit cautions with re-reading books that were mostly intellectually stimulating without a strong story. Once I liked the story then I am not worried, but intellectual stimulation is not all that lasting for me. The only annoying thing is that I am more likely to pick up on historical inaccuracies. That can be quite a joy-killer.
In any case, I've read some research suggesting that re-reading and re-watching is much more enjoyable than first reading (even when you do not do it by choice). I know they experimented even with spoilers, and surprisingly, overall people enjoyed the experience more when they knew the spoilers, and if I remember correctly the same effect could be seen in "surprise thrillers". Think I should follow up on the paper, it is really interesting line of research.
@Justin: That is exactly what I was thinking (thanks to pointing to my sloppy use of words tactic and strategy)! If Hannibal was a Roman, then there would be no republic after a year or two, and he probably wouldn't need elephants. He did not use any economical or political warfare, that's why he was so surprised that no one was joining him with real help. He wanted a large decisive victory when he should have focused on taking over the country (like Romans would do)...in that sense he really was not building an empire, he was just plundering.

I'm interested in this book. I'm looking forward to hearing what you have to say about it. I tried one other Ben Kane book, but it was too graphically violent and sexual for me.

I do not mind that sometimes, as long as it has some purpose in the story. On the other hand I am not sure how I feel about Kane's fusion of fantasy and historical fiction literature... I am much more comfortable with Cornwell's approach, where he leaves magic and prophesies as something that can be explained by tricks/science as well as by magic. Ben Kane made prophetic gift of one of the character a driver of the story in The Forgotten Legion. Hope he will not do that here. What Ben Kane can really do well, is to let his POV characters to look around and describe what they see. It is really enjoyable so far. And yes, he started by description of Carthage :).


well I am relieved that you are not yet going to start on next months group reads. Much more fun when people start together. :)

I really liked the personalities of the characters too, Nate. And yes, Monomachus is off the hook psycho.

I agree with Nate, I really enjoyed the various point of view and the ending is truly touching.
I truly wonder what would have happened had Hannibal had total support from the Carthage council. It's clear that Rome was not willing to give up, but things could have dragged on for much longer and been much more painful for them. Especially if others like Philip of Macedonia and various Gaul tribes would have jumped in on the side of Hannibal following more success. A good what-if for sure.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Gentle (other topics)Harry Sidebottom (other topics)