A novel that tells the story of the brutal Roman Emperor Caligula, as told by his close friend.
In this latest in Stein’s Vox Populi series of historical novels set in ancient Rome, the narrative centers on one of the most infamous figures in Roman history: Gaius Julius Caesar Germanicus, known to posterity by his nickname “Caligula” (or “little boots”). As the novel opens, the narrator, Publius Decimus Silvanus, a small child, has been drafted by his upper-middle-class family to become the playmate of young Caligula; Silvanus’ late mother had been friends with Caligula’s great-grandmother Livia, the wife of the Emperor Augustus. The story progresses through the lives of the two characters; Caligula rises in the ranks of the Julio-Claudian dynasty as the beloved son of the popular general Germanicus, and Silvanus becomes an increasingly confident doctor. The author balances familiar details from ancient accounts by Suetonius and Tacitus with the entirely invented story of Silvanus and his medical practice, which is described in vivid detail; a scene in which an unlucky stonemason has his leg amputated, for instance, is both gory and realistic. In a neat narrative twist, these medical details, meticulously recorded by Silvanus on scrolls that long survive him, come in handy for a Roman doctor a generation later; these result in intriguing sequences that allow Stein to dramatize a wider swath of Roman life. Readers receive highly detailed realizations of other societal aspects, such as the workings of Roman silver mines and the administration of the Roman Mint. Stein skillfully anchors his wide-ranging story to the odd relationship at its center, with Silvanus reflecting on the young man he knew, whom he describes as “sharp as a flake of obsidian.” Readers of historical fiction set in ancient Rome will appreciate Stein's well-researched attention to detail, and all will enjoy his understated wit.
A gripping, multifaceted story of an emperor and his era.