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La República

Esta saga se sumerge en la turbulenta era de la República Romana tardía. Sigue los destinos de individuos ambiciosos cuyas vidas están tejidas con intrigas, luchas de poder y lealtad inquebrantable. Es una historia de ascenso y caída, de amistades puestas a prueba por la traición y del destino impredecible en la cuna de la civilización occidental.

The Gods of War
The Sword Of Revenge
Pillars of Rome
The Pillars of Rome

Orden recomendado de lectura

  1. The Pillars of Rome

    • 524 páginas
    • 19 horas de lectura

    In a time of external threats and internal strife, two men battle for the Republic's soul and its vast empire. Meanwhile, two boys seek insight into their future from a renowned Roman oracle in a cave illuminated by flickering torches.

    The Pillars of Rome1
    3,7
  2. Pillars of Rome

    • 524 páginas
    • 19 horas de lectura

    A cave hacked out of the rock, lit by flickering torches - two young boys appeal to the famed Roman oracle for a glimpse into their future. The Sybil draws a blood-red shape of an eagle with wings outstretched. An omen of death. As they flee from the cave in fear, Aulus and Lucius make an oath of loyalty until death.

    Pillars of Rome1
    3,5
  3. The Sword Of Revenge

    • 512 páginas
    • 18 horas de lectura

    Rome has lost its greatest warrior - for Aulus, the doom-laden prophecy of forty years earlier has come to pass. It is now left to Lucius to defy the oracle's curse alone, and the corrupt senator leaves nothing to chance in his bid to survive. But one boy, alone in the world, holds the key to his fate, and the future of the Roman Republic.

    The Sword Of Revenge2
    3,6
  4. The Gods of War

    • 476 páginas
    • 17 horas de lectura

    Lucius Falerius is dead, and Rome in its entirety mourns the passing of its most powerful senator. It falls to his young son Marcellus to carry out his father's legacy and restore the rights promised to the defeated Sicilian slaves, yet there are those who will not see the honour of Rome compromised and the slaves assuaged. On the Roman border provinces there is trouble, and the legions move north to neutralise the threat posed by the Celts. The confederation of Celtic tribes is united under one Chieftain, the formidable and unpredictable Brennos, yet there is a plot to see him dead and the confederation broken. For Brennos, the treachery comes from within his own family, for which he will exact a brutal and bloody revenge.

    The Gods of War3
    3,7