We're back to the kind of writing Caroline Lawrence was coming up with at the beginning of this wonderful series of books telling the stories of four young would-be detectives in ancient Roman times.
There's no love intrigues or talk of marriage, no hugely awful catastrophe awaiting, or caused by, the children and no mass kidnapping of children, as often occurs in the books. Instead, we've got a nice straightforward mystery: who is trying to kill off the charioteers of the Green team in the chariot races at the Circus Maximus?
Along the way, we also get to know more about Nubia, the ex-slave girl rescued by her friend, Flavia, in the very first book. She is, by far, the best character of the four. She is kind, peaceful, graceful and - despite her quiet modesty - immensely intelligent and skilled. In this story we learn of her love for, and close affinity with, the horses at the Circus Maximus. Indeed, her understanding is really quite supernatural.
Lawrence has managed the spiritual and supernatural with skilful ease in these stories. I did worry that the books were going to be a vehicle for pushing Christianity but, thankfully, that didn't happen even though it gets an awful lot of mentioning in the early books. Later, there's hints that the Roman gods are looking after the children. It is in this book though that we see Nubia able to communicate with the horses. It isn't over-the-top and I guess you could just about put it down to her fanciful imagination if you so wish, but really she has the gift with horses and that's taken as read by all the characters.
As always, Lawrence's knowledge of history is superb and it is genuinely impossible to figure out what's based on fact and what on fiction. Aristo's Scroll, given at the end of every book, gives the lowdown on what's fact, what's theory and what's total fabrication. I was very much surprised reading it this time around; I'll say no more than that.
Considering this is the twelfth book and it is hard to keep up the momentum with this kind of series, the author has done a remarkable job here. The plot was every bit as engaging as the first books and the storyline really quite exciting. Teenagers will love it and so will adults too!