Share for friends:

The Last Legion (2003)

The Last Legion (2003)

Book Info

Rating
3.74 of 5 Votes: 2
Your rating
ISBN
0330489755 (ISBN13: 9780330489751)
Language
English
Publisher
pan macmillan

About book The Last Legion (2003)

Analisi grammaticale:Direi buona, anche se non eccelsa quanto il mio nome è nessuno. Ho notato nel romanzo solo un errore di un tempo verbale. Non amo molto il narratore onnisciente e all'inizio si è un po' spazzati, ma si fa presto l'abitudine. Ambientazione:L’Italia da Capri a Ravenna, fino all'attraversamento delle Alpi e arrivo in Britannia.A mio avviso, Manfredi è un maestro nel descrivere le strade romane, i luoghi di posta per la sosta dei cavalli, le valli e le campagne dell’Italia di fine impero. Amo anche le sue descrizioni delle battaglie tra i soldati romani e i barbari.Personaggi molto ben descritti sono:Aurelio e la sua lealtà, amore e desiderio di libertà. Cerca in tutti i modi di proteggere l’ultimo baluardo di Roma, con la sua cultura, arte e bellezza proteggendo Romolo.Livia Prisca con il suo amore non molto celato verso il soldato Aurelio, che non ricorda il suo passato, è la mia preferita. Una donna forte, combattiva, che non si lascia scoraggiare da nulla e da nessuno.Ambrosine, il precettore di Romolo. In realtà si scopre essere un druido britanno giunto in italia anni prima per richiedere aiuto al vecchio imperatore. Un uomo astuto, intelligentissimo e ricco di risorse. Molte volte nel romanzo il gruppetto riesce a sfuggire dalle grinfie del persecutore grazie a lui e alla forza dei soldati romani.Wulfila, il generale barbaro al soldo di Odoacre che deve scovare Romolo Augusto e imprigionarlo in Italia e uccidere i suoi sostenitori.Giudizio personale: bel libro. Manfredi ha avuto una buona idea nel creare sia la figura di Ambrosine sia di far fuggire Romolo Augusto in Britannia. Da leggere, lo consiglio!

This book wasn't what I thought it was. I still like reading stories that take place in this period of Roman rule so I read it anyway once I realized things weren't going the way I thought they should go. I am wondering if it would have been better if it wasn't a translation. The author is Italian and in some spots I thought, "please tell me that something was lost in the translation because I could have done better than this." And as you can tell that must be pretty bad because when I post some reviews I cringe at my writing.I thought the story was a historical guess of what happened to the roman legion that marched north of Hadrian's Wall and was never heard from again. But it was about power grabs of the Caesars during the last days of Rome. I did not feel any real connection to any of the characters. It could have been a better book.

Do You like book The Last Legion (2003)?

I liked the cover and I needed something to read.Perhaps the story was lackluster due to poor translation? The premise of the book, the last Roman Emperor emigrates to Britain and establishes Pendragon royalty was interesting. It was just the endless slogging through endless boring terrain and the predictable "twists" (how new is it when Wulfie keeps showing up just when things start looking up...every time?). And our hero (not the boy Emperor, but an amnesiac legionnaire) is at the end, dropped out the storyline without a "have an apple." Unsatisfying.
—Hilary

I love historical novels and I admire Manfredi's attention to detail and his obvious depth of research. I find myself checking his characters and events on the internet or in history books to know more - and that is always a good thing for any book.This novel feels a bit like a Hollywood film and not just because it has already been filmed. There's the same action packed plot - I wonder if there were times when all that happened was that they were simply walking in the forest? There's the tortured, ripped hero, the nubile heroine (maybe a little too much Halle Berry in the descriptions). The bad guy is really ugly of course - and we all know what happens to the bad guy in the end. I did like the very believable Arthurian twist - nice idea, although the way Ygraine appears felt just a little oddIt was a good but fairly undemanding read. Perfect for planes, trains and exercise bikes.
—martin

this book. this book fucked me up. why don't people read this, again? it had everything you could possibly wish for: roman culture, mostly accurate historical background, psychological conflict, amazing character development, inspiring quotes who make you re-think your existence, consistent plot, bamf female characters, tear-jerking love story, sword fights, cultural conflicts and last, but not least, that writing style, you know which one, the one making readers eat the goddamn pages and cry at the end. it was one of my reading highlights of this year. it changed me somewhat. it made me more optimistic, it gave me hope that, no matter what, the world (Rome, if I am to quote the book), is not represented by one people or by one race; "Rome is an ideal. And ideals may never die." Please, just go ahead and do yourself a favour and read this book. You're not going to be sorry.
—Ioana Bolboaca

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Valerio Massimo Manfredi

Other books in category Picture Books