The Big Book Store  
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Art, Architecture & Photography > General AAS > The Temple of the Muses: An Spqr Mystery  
Categories
Art, Architecture & Photography
Audio CDs
Audio Cassettes
Biography
Business, Finance & Law
Calendars, Diaries, Annuals & More
Childrens Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Fiction
Food & Drink
Health, Family & Lifestyle
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Humour
Languages
Mind, Body & Spirit
Music, Stage & Screen
Poetry, Drams & Criticism
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science & Nature
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Scientific, Technical & Mediacl
Society, Politics & Philosophy
Sports, Hobbies & Games
Study Books
Travel & Holiday
Young Adult
DVD
Shopping Cart
Subcategories
Ages 0-2
Ages 3-4
Ages 5-8
Ages 9-11
Ages 12-16
New
Used

The Temple of the Muses: An Spqr Mystery

The Temple of the Muses: An Spqr Mystery

zoom enlarge 
Author: John Maddox Roberts
Publisher: Avon Books (Mm)
Category: Book

Buy New: £14.95



New (2) Used (4) from £8.99

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews

Media: Paperback
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.3 x 0.7

ISBN: 0380766299
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780380766291
ASIN: 0380766299

Publication Date: September 1992
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: NEW. Hard to Find Title! Sent By Airmail from New York. Please allow 7-15 Business days. No VAT or extra charges. Order Confirmation.#

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Temple of the Muses: Spqr IV (SPQR)

Similar Items:

  • Spqr V: Saturnalia (SPQR)
  • The Sacrilege: Spqr III (SPQR)
  • Spqr VI: Nobody Loves a Centurion (SPQR)
  • Spqr II: The Catiline Conspiracy (SPQR)
  • The Tribune's Curse (SPQR)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fourth in the Series   February 26, 2007
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

John Maddox Roberts is the pseudonym of Mark Ramsay, author of numerous works of science fiction and fantasy, in addition to his successful historical SPQR mystery series. He lives in New Mexico with his wife.

Once again our hero, Decius Caecilius Metellus the Younger is drawn into a web of deceit and intrigue, but this time outside the confines of his beloved Rome. Decius is given the chance to join a delegation that are on a diplomatic mission to Alexandria and he sees it as an ideal opportunity to escape the attention of his growing number of enemies in Rome.

Decius is just beginning to enjoy his visit to Egypt, with all of its exotic pleasures, when a suspicious death of a philosopher occurs, coinciding with the ravings of a charismatic cult leader. Intrigued by the death, Decius is given permission by the Pharaoh to investigate the crime, but what he eventually discovers shocks even Decius. Our hero has taken many women to his bed, but when the body of a famous courtesan mysteriously turns up in his bed, Decius is less than amused and finds himself embroiled in a conspiracy much more far reaching than he could ever have imagined.



4 out of 5 stars A thrilling episode in Rome's Sleuthing Young Senator   May 11, 2001
 33 out of 34 found this review helpful

After solving the mystery of the Sacrilege in Ceasar's House and with the political implications of his actions, trying to reveal the plot to subvert the senile Roman Republic by the most powerful persons of the era, Decius Caecilius Metellus junior leaves the premises of the Capital, in a "rehabilitating" embassy to the court of Rome's protegee king Ptolaemaeus of Egypt,as companion to his Senior relative Cointus Caecilius Metellus "the Cretan". A seemingly easy mission to allow him to be forgotten and safe by his dedicated and annoyed ennemies, brings the young sleuthing senator to the port of The Ptolaemean Alexandreia. The majestic description of one of the most flamboyant and grand cities of that era comes alive in front of the reader's eyes, under the quill skills and excellent historic knowledge of John Maddox Roberts. The Great Library and the Museum with the great philosophers and scientists of the era is the theatre of his first social visit, due to the interest of his betrothed Julia,niece of Ceasar, in a surprise trip to Alexandreia, and her interest of the scientific research and theory. But the young senator's fate brings him again to the entangled paths of a murderous conspiracy. Mathematician Iphicrates from Chios, one of the last pupils of Archimedes is found murdered in the Museum during a symposium. Again the natural eagerness of Metellus brings him to the dangerous tracks of the conspirators. What is the involment of 10 year old Cleopatra's older sister Verenice in it? What brings in the plot the Parthian Ambassador and an Athenean Haetera? Lots of sub plots fitting like jigsaw puzzles and the help of Julia and the Greek doctor Asclepiades mortuary skills will be enough for the Sleuthing Senator to solve the mystery of the murder and beneath it? Once more John Maddox Roberts gives us an exceptional description of an historic era even if some people may have slight objections about the "subjective" views he presents in Metellus's comments. Combined with a mystery plot and a way of writing that doesn't allow the reader to get outtracked by the vast amounts of historical data he presents and that added to the normal "predictability" of a series of mystery solving novels with a central hero... just as Roberts has proved in his previous books he can easily overcome this and provide us with the thrill of the unexpected. At the end of the book the reader will find himself delighted by a very compact and well written thriller and a lot of historical knowledge he couldn't have absorbed so easily from a school book. Just read enjoy and grab the next in the series.!!!