Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s Spartacus may be your grandfather’s Spartacus, but is not likely your father’s or Kirk Douglas’ Spartacus from his 1960 motion picture. In a bit of prophecy from the final chapter, Gibbon, through the voice of Kleon, one of the slave commanders, said,
“As this story will grow, dim and confused, in the ages to be, the story of the slaves’ insurrection. They’ll mix the marches and forget our names, and make of Grannicus a loyal hero and of Gershom…a strayed Gaul from Marsala! Poets and hates, with us only their shadowy cup-bearers. All dim and tangled in the tales they’ll tell, except their beginnings with that spring when we roused the slaves. And all the rest a dream or a lie."
Indeed, none of the commanders named above appear in Douglas’ movie, based on the 1951 Howard Fast novel. Most of the plot lines from that novel are absent in this one. The intrigue that comes from the Senate in Rome is transferred here to the generals of the slave army, some of whom are loyal to Spartacus and some who are not. Oddly, Spartacus has a relatively minor role in this book. It is dominated by Kleon and the rest of the commanders.
Only three characters from the movie have any prominent parts in this book. Crixus, played by John Ireland, is killed before the final battle. Crassus, portrayed by Lawrence Olivier, is seen mostly from afar, but is the Roman commander who pursues and eventually defeats Spartacus. Varinia, Spartacus’ lover in the movie, played by Jean Simmons, is a composite of three women in this novel, closest resembling Elpinice, who appears and dies early.
Gibbon’s writing style can be quite poetic, but not easily read.
Three stars waning.