The triumphant final volume in the epic series - a series of monumental battles, fascinating history and action-packed adventure.The vast and deadly conflict between Alexander the Great's former generals as they battle for control of his empire has reached a tense stalemate. No one seems able to strike the decisive blow.But with everything in the balance, a secret hidden in the remote mountains is a young man who could change Herakles, the son of Alexander.Whoever aspires to Alexander's mantle must now control his one legitimate heir - or destroy him - and a war being played across the known world is set for its final, bloody conclusion. As the rival armies converge on the village of Ipsus, twin monarchs Satyrus and Melitta know that they too must gamble their own lives and the survival of their Black Sea kingdom on the outcome...
Christian Cameron was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1962. He grew up in Rockport, Massachusetts, Iowa City, Iowa,Christian Cameron and Rochester, New York, where he attended McQuaid Jesuit High School and later graduated from the University of Rochester with a degree in history.
After the longest undergraduate degree on record (1980-87), he joined the United States Navy, where he served as an intelligence officer and as a backseater in S-3 Vikings in the First Gulf War, in Somalia, and elsewhere. After a dozen years of service, he became a full time writer in 2000. He lives in Toronto (that’s Ontario, in Canada) with his wife Sarah and their daughter Beatrice, currently age four. And a half.
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After a very, but very long time, I could finish this 6-book-saga which I really liked. It's not that I took too long because it was boring to read, but just because I didn't have much time to read and I have been busy with my duties. I liked the end, so I liked the majority of the characters' end. I also liked the analysis that this saga made me think of regarding everything related to a war (or wars): Politics, business, families, status, religion, personal interests. I also want to add that I learned a lot of more technical words. For example, regarding Greek vocabulary related to the military context; What a hoplite is, parts of an armor, meaning of ships, amongmany other things. Congratulations to Cameron for these nice characters he created which get stuck in my head and at the end of the book I end up loving but I also get sad when the book ends. I completely recommend this saga if you are interested in military novels.
Luego de un tiempo muy, pero muy largo, he podido terminar esta saga de 6 libros que me gustó bastante. No es que me haya demorado tanto porque me aburría al leerlo, era simplemente porque no tenía tanto tiempo para leer y he estado ocupado con mis deberes. Me gustó el final, así como también el final de la mayoría de los personajes. Me gustó también el análisis que esta saga me hizo hacer acerca de todo lo detrás que hay de una guerra (o guerras); política negocios, familias, estatus, religión, intereses personales. También quiero agregar que he aprendido mucho sobre palabras más técnicas como por ejemplo lo que se refiere al vocabulario griego relacionado a lo militar; lo que es un hoplita, partes de las armaduras, significado de los barcos, entre muchas otras cosas. Felicidades a Cameron por estos lindos personajes que ha creado y que se meten en la cabeza y al final del libro les tomas cariño y te da pena cuando el libro termina y sabes que los personajes ya no van más. Totalmente recomendado si están insertos en la novela histórica militar.
A wonderfully gripping book (and series) set during a fascinating time period. Christian Cameron brings the Hellenistic Greek world to life with his assiduous attention to detail about warfare and daily life. Cameron achieves a great balance of action, adventure, description and lighthearted humour, making these books a joy to read.
This fascinating and gripping book is the 6th and probably the final volume of the wonderful Tyrant series. Sadly I miss the historical details from the Historical and Author's notes within this book, but still I'm happy that this book contains, just like its predecessors, a well documented glossary and great maps of the most important parts, the likes of great places and countries which are important to this part of the Ancient world, and not to forget there's a map of the Battle of Ipsus of 301 BC. The historical details has been worked out in a most fantastic fashion within this story, and thus making this book such a very compelling tale to read, with in their midst our main characters, the twins Satyrus and Melitta. Superb storytelling makes this book such a sensational read, simply because the author has the ability to keep you spellbound throughout with this thrilling Ancient Greek historical adventure story. What I sadly miss is a time/year direction in which to place this terrific tale, but at the same time I would like to say that it does not degrade the story itself in any way, and so in my humble opinion the main part of this book has moved on towards the year 301 BC, with at it's ultimate height the final conclusion, which is the famous Battle of Ipsus in that same year of 301 BC. The story itself is about the control of the Empire, Alexander the Great's legacy of course, and over that control will be fought between two factions, on the one hand the Macedonians under the leadership of Lysimachos, Seleucus and Cassander, and on the other hand the Antigonids under the leadership of Antigonus One-Eye and his son Demetrius. What will follow is a most wonderful description and thus telling about the conflicts, scheming and treachery between these two factions, which will eventually lead to the ultimate Battle of Ipsus where all will be decided in a hard fought bloody way. Highly recommended, for this has been a superb series, and thus in my opinion therefore this book is "A Tremendous Fitting End"!
And so the series ends. It has been quite a fun ride, and it seems so long ago since I first stepped into the northern Euxine with Kineas back in book 1. I do feel like the end was a bit rushed though. It felt a little like Cameron was scrambling to get all the pieces to come together and I didn't quite get the closure I'd hoped for on some characters. But the battles were epic, the politics interesting and complex, and loved the way Cameron goes into detail on strategy and movements of scouts and armies. The set up for the final battle was especially exciting and found myself looking at maps to imagine where each of the 6 forces were located, how they were moving, how far scouts were travelling, how they were trying to track where each other were etc. I just wish that I also wish there had been a final historical note to tell us or perhaps recommend some reading on the subject.
a page turner and good ending to the series covering precisely what the blurb tells us; mostly Satyrus in this book, with little from Melita
the last years of the main successors war (between the siege of Rhodes and the battle of Ipsos) and the double quest of Satyrus to insure the safety (insofar as possible) of his kingdom in these tumultuous years and to get back Miriam (hostage of Demetrios as the book starts) and convince her to eventually marry/stay with him in Tanais despite the religious and status differences (she is Jewish and her brother, now the head of their rich merchant family, is firmly opposed to her marrying a non-believer despite his friendship with Satyrus, while Satyrus is definitely Greek in his beliefs and even like his father Kineas, is beloved by some of the gods with all the attendant benefits and risks...)
so unlikely alliances, new friends and enemies, the return of characters from earlier books and a definite conclusion, while the usual battles, fights, ambushes, desperate escapes, politics, intrigues and assassinations abound, all culminating obviously in the decisive Ipsos at the end
overall, Tyrant Force of Kings is a very good book which delivers an appropriate ending to the saga, though it has a bit the feeling of "seen that already" and lacks the more emotional and dramatic moments of the 2nd and 3rd books about Satyrus and Melita which remain my favorites from the tetralogy
This was a fine end to a series that I have enjoyed. The centrepiece of the book is the battle of Ipsus, which is vividly recreated. The confusion, tension, terror and sheer scale of a successor battlefield are depicted very memorably. It is also appropriate that this battle, which conclusively confirmed that Alexander's empire would not be reunited under a single ruler, concludes the series and secures the future of Satryus and Melitta's little Euxine kingdom. I have enjoyed the plotting, intrigue and politics that surrounded the interactions of the Diadochi, and how Kineas and then Satyrus have navigated it successfully. I appreciated the dual description of them given in this book, that Kineas was a mercenary with the heart of a king, and Satyrus was a king with the heart of a mercenary. They were two very well-developed and memorable characters. The ending was also quite poignant, and hit exactly the right note: "It might have lasted forever, this paradise. In fact, they had less than thirty years. But they used them well."
If the third and fourth books had been stronger, then this would have been a great series, but it's still worth your time if you are into historical fiction. I look forward to reading more from Christian Cameron.
I stumbled into this six-book series by way of one of my favorite recent fantasy series, the Traitor Son Cycle by Miles Cameron. I noticed that, for some unknown reason, Cameron also wrote under the name of Christian Cameron, and had a series set in the time of Alexander the Great.
As one who knows way too much about that Hellenistic time period, and one who loved Cameron’s previous work, I was all in from the moment I started volume one, Tyrant. And as this is a connected series that really needs to be read in order to be appreciated, this review is of all six books considered as a whole, rather than a review of each book (though parenthetical notes will be appended for each).
The story covers about 30 years of ancient history, ending in 301 BCE at the Battle of Ipsos. Now if you already know who won the Battle of Ipsos, you will be a little too far ahead of the game, for much of the suspense of the series (which includes other historical events) will be lost – and you will also be surprised by some revisions Cameron makes in order to tell the story the way he wants to.
But the basic premise is this: Cameron inserts fictional, high-ranking characters into the complicated weave of Hellenistic history, and has them participate in events both major and minor. For the most part, this works extremely well, as Cameron’s grasp of the minutiae of Hellenistic life and his gritty sense of the bloody, painful and horrific cost of ancient warfare is superb. He is also an excellent writer, so the story moves along at a brisk pace, flagging only momentarily in the later volumes.
There are issues, of course. Like Star Trek, Kineas and Satyrus, the two main protagonists, are in the front lines way too often to be believed, especially in the later books, and their interactions with the major historical figures seem unnecessary, as if the editors insisted that somehow Kineas and Alexander are in contact, and so are Satyrus and various Hellenistic leaders.
Cameron, though, is perfectly willing to kill off major characters, and in sudden and unexpected ways, which adds a tremendous amount of tension to battle scenes and assassination attempts (unlike Star Trek). There’s also some magical realism thrown in, but any attempt to explain the plot would require much more patience than any reader of this review is likely to have.
But in short, Kineas, Satyrus and his woefully underutilized twin sister Melitta (why wasn’t she more prominent in the narrative?), all represent what we now consider Southern Russia, at the north of what we call the Black Sea. In those times, it was the place where the steppe nomads and expanding population of farmers and colonizers crossed paths, and it became a crucial part of the Hellenistic game of thrones given its ability to produce grain that the Mediterranean cities desperately needed to feed their people.
So Cameron tosses these characters, their soldiers and their grain into the Hellenistic mix, and in the end, comes up with a wonderful series that I enjoyed from start to finish. Then again, I love excellent historical fiction, and this is my favorite period, so I’m hardly unbiased. But I will say this: If you have even a passing interest in the world of Alexander the Great after his death, the Tyrant series is for you. I just wish there were more than six volumes.
* * * * *
Though just above those five asterisks I wrote that I wish there were more than six volumes, at the same time, I have to admit the formula was wearing a bit thin -- especially as Melitta, the twin sister, was relegated to a very minor supporting role. There were too many battle scenes that seemed similar, too many grievous wounds and painful days, and too much artificial tension between Satyrus and his lady love. That said, there could have been more stories here, though tweaks would have had to have been made.
My other comment on this series, and too many others to mention, is that after thousands of pages of blood and struggle, little time is spent savoring the triumph of survival. At the end of a long, brutal set piece in "Tyrant: Destroyer of Kings," for example, there were only a few words spent on enjoying the good times, and at the end of this six-book series, with plenty of betrayal and battle, there were six pages set aside for celebration. It would have been nice to spend some time with these characters when they were under imminent threat of death and disaster, especially after getting to know them so well.
La última entrega de la saga Tirano culmina una obra sobresaliente para los amantes de la novela histórica, enmarcada en uno de los conflictos bélicos más famosos de la antigüedad. Con este título llega la conclusión a la epopeya que han vivido los personajes y donde se cierran de manera satisfactoria todas las tramas que nos han acompañado en su más de tres mil páginas.
El autor ha sabido desarrollar unos personajes carismáticos a los que, muchas veces, no tenemos que cogerles demasiado cariño. La guerra, las conjuras, las enfermedades y los cambios de bando los castigará continuamente. A veces demasiado. Pero nos permiten recoger un escenario complejo bastante simplificado para la trama de esta novela, que no deja de ser entretenido y emocionante.
Como pasó con Tirano. Destructor de ciudades, el personaje de Sátiro roba todo el protagonismo a su hermana Melita, que sigue teniendo su papel importante pero ya en segundo plano. Hay personajes recurrentes que sufrirán alguna transformación interesante, algún personaje forzado que surge para dar solución a parte de la trama. Pero lo más interesante de este libro es que participan muchos de los Diádocos en conflicto y Sátiro estará en medio de todos los bandos. Por supuesto no puede faltar una gran batalla final, captura de ciudades, batallas navales… La acción pocas veces se detiene. En general, este libro y, toda la saga en sí, han sido muy animadas y me ha ayudado a conocer una época bastante desconocida para mí.
Christian Cameron ha sabido mantener el ritmo en toda la saga, incluso superándose a sí mismo en algunas de las entregas. Para mí, el primer y cuarto libro (Tirano y Tirano. El rey del bósforo respectivamente) son los que quizá se pueden hacer más pesados. En uno porque hay demasiados elementos de chamanismo y premoniciones que entorpecen la acción. En otro, porque estamos en un interludio complejo con demasiadas opciones. El resto, han sido una gozada por sus escenas, personajes y estilo de narración. Y ya se me hace complejo recordar quién es quién con nombres tan repetidos y parecidos entre ellos (Diodoro, Apolodoro, Estratocles, Euménides…). Es solo un ejemplo, hay cientos de ellos.
Justo en este libro he echado en falta los textos finales del autor sobre notas históricas y curiosidades. En los cinco anteriores están, incluso están repetidos salvo por un par de líneas que difieren de uno a otro. Aquí, donde podría haberse extendido para explicar detalles sobre el resultado final del conflicto, sus notas de porqué tomó partido la narración hacia uno u otro bando… pues no hay nada. Ni siquiera sus dos o tres páginas de agradecimientos. No sé si en la versión original tampoco estaban, pero los he echado de menos.
Lo que sí me ha parecido muy desquiciante en la primera edición de 2015 que tengo de “Debolsillo” (Zeta Ediciones) es la cantidad de errores que contiene el texto por falta de revisión. Ya no solo cambios gramaticales de palabras mal escritas (hay muchísimas) por que se han tecleado mal. Es que además el traductor confunde nombres de personajes en muchas ocasiones, lo que provoca frases sin sentido o que cambia por completo el contexto de la situación. Del estilo: “Melita miró a los ojos de Sátiro”. ¡Pero si Melita está a cientos de kilómetros de distancia en la escena anterior! ¿Ha vuelto por sorpresa? Ah, no, se refiere a Miriam. Y, como digo, ocurren demasiadas veces en el libro. El libro salió con prisas sin haber pasado correctamente por revisión.
Pese a lo comentado en los dos párrafos anteriores, he acabado muy satisfecho con la saga. Si te gustan las novelas históricas ambientadas en la antigüedad, con escenas de acción, batallas navales o terrestres, intrigas y héroes, te la recomiendo.
This final part of the series sees the final decisive battles over the remnants of Alexander's empire. Some of the key players, like Ptolemy, have established themselves in one area and are happy with that. Others still think they can have the whole world as Alexander did, and it's interesting to see the various characters trying to balance grand ambitions with reality. We see the conflict from the point of view of each of those key players, allowing us to try and understand them and learn a bit more about them. And as ever, the battles are reconstructed as vividly and plausibly as we're used to with Cameron's books.
In the midst of all of that, the sub-plot with Satyrus and his dithering over Miriam felt a bit... frustrating? A bit soap-opera-ish. You can probably guess they'll end up together, but there's a lot of scenes of them putting obstacles in their own way, even though they both know they like each other.
The ending also feels a bit rushed - a page-long scene, then some summarising by the author that breaks the sense of the story being told in the moment. I would have liked more room given to that final scene instead - and the summary could easily have been part of a Historical Notes section which is curiously missing from this book. There are lots of maps, which are helpful, but I found it quite jarring not to have the Notes that are given with all of the previous installments - especially given the appearance of Herakles in this book. We are left not knowing the fates of some characters and Notes might have helped to clear that up.(Although I appreciate that, in some cases, it may not be possible to know what happened to some of them, given the patchy nature of the surviving information).
There are also some typos in this hardback edition, which I assume are fixed in the later paperbacks.
Overall, it's a decent end to the series. It's difficult to tell a story like this, which covers so many key characters and geographical areas, with sometimes patchy or potentially biased historical sources to go on, but the overall - and over the course of the series, the author has done a good job bringing it to life.
A solid continuation and conclusion of the series. More scenes of hiding and assassination attempts, harking back to the first book. Satyrus and Melitta have their own separate adventures but join up at the end for the final great battle, the historical Battle of Ipsus (301 B.C.).
I got a bit bored halfway through after yet another scolding of Satyrus by a close friend for risking so many other men’s lives and causing the deaths of many for questionable purposes. All those scenes are the same: Satyrus gets annoyed while recognizing the truth of the accusations, yet never changes his behaviour. Yawn!
The battle scenes also lost their interest for me and blurred into one another. The chase for Miriam went on too long, I thought, and I felt I was approaching the end of the book, but actually it went on for much longer, mainly because Cameron has to get Satyrus and Melitta in on the final great battle.
I enjoyed the scenes with Stratokles and Sophokles the assassin, and where Satyrus is on his own. It was fun to read the teasing of young Satyrus by his older soldiers, those who’d been his father’s associates and who cannot stop calling him “lad” which Satyrus cannot stop himself for being irritated by!
Along the way, Satyrus picks up a “butler” (did the Geeks really have such things?), Phoibos, who is the very epitome of butlerhood and reminds one irresistibly of that most famous butler of all; the give away is in the line, “I strive to give satisfaction, sir!” Cameron has read his Wodehouse!
This is without a doubt the most fascinating historical series I've come across. I would probably have given this a 5+ if I had read the beginning of the series. All the characters who are still alive are brought back in this last volume to have one more go at what is left of Alexander's empire. There is a distinct flavour of WWI in the "this will end war forever" suggestion but someone makes the inevitable remark that no matter what there will always be war. The women make an attempt at changing the results except for the Queen of the Sea of Grass, who just leads her archers into the heart of the fighting where many of the youngest are slaughtered. The characters are people, good, bad and in between and their decisions make sense to the reader, even when you see essential fields trampled into the ground and the season's crop gone with them. Satyrus is always concerned about the crops, though, and worries about how "the people" will live through the coming year. War was always a separate thing, something in which you weren't involved unless it was part of your career choice. It is too bad that warfare now involves everyone belonging to the bodies at war regardless of who or what you are.
Tirano es parte de una serie del estadounidense Christian Cameron quien es escritor de novelas históricas como es el caso de esta; nos habla sobre el acomodo de un mundo que resiente el vacío generado por la muerte de Alejandro Magno, la competencia entre sus generales por dominar el inmenso imperio heredado; a pesar de que es mi género favorito esta en particular me dio mucha flojera, demasiados términos de unidades militares, de distancia, artículos, unidades de medida y demás en ..... griego antiguo; para mi gusto se pasa de riguroso y hace que comiences a tratar de identificar de que está hablando y eso pierde el hilo de la historia llevándose el sabor hacia el glosario o búsqueda en Google. También pudiera ser que debe ser leída con mas calma y tiempo del que le dediqué, sin embargo eso hace que le de un muy personal 6/10 esperando de cualquier manera que si la leen pongan sus comentarios en mi pagina de Facebook Leer te Vuelve Sexy
An absolutely wonderful journey through the ancient Hellenic world. The author captures the culture, the religion, the battles on land and sea quite magnificently but most importantly I have come love Kineas, Srayanka, Philokles, Leon, Diodorus, Anaxagoras, Theron, Stratokles, Satyrus, Melitta and too many more to mention almost as if they were firm friends or family.
A la par de Destructora de Ciudades cierra con buen ritmo una serie que, por momentos en el libro 3 y 4, te da la impresión de que podría desmoronarse en el tedio que por momentos se apodera de la historia de los hijos de Kineas. Sabes que el primer libro de la serie es el mejor porque la sombra de Kineas se proyectó durante el resto de la saga. Esa fue la intención del autor, pero dudo que el efecto de melancolía tuviera la intensidad deseada.
Último libro de una serie que me encantó y me atrapó. Una serie excelente para los amantes de la novela histórica. Éste no es el mejor libro de los 6, pero es bueno. Me parece que si bien desarrolló bien a batalla de Ipsos, el combate Sátiro-Demetrio decepcionó. También siento que le faltó dar un mejor cierre a algunos personajes como Melita, Anaxágoras, Apolodoro y Estratocles
Characters you love or love to hate, non-stop action, and an amazing time in history all make this entire series impossible to put down. Thank you, Mr. Cameron for taking me to this time and place with these people. I enjoyed the trip.
Tras leer toda la saga, debo confesar que el último libro me ha decepcionado un poco. Te lleva al climax durante 6 obras y al llegar al mismo, al menos en mi opinión personal, este no tiene la envergadura épica que merecía.
Flojo final para una gran saga, igualmente recomendable de leer.
The Diadochi meet in battle to settle the spoils of Alexander's empire. Reluctantly Satyrus and Melitta find it necessary to participate in order to secure their kingdom.
I makes no bones about the fact that I’m a Christian Cameron fan, his books top my annual must read list every year, and are often competing for my book of the year award. This latest book Force of Kings is no different, although its a bitter sweet experience, the final book in a series going back to 2008 and the debut book in this series, a series that has helped give me a deeper love of ancient Greek culture, respect for that culture and respect for the author as one of the smartest most driven, nicest guys i know.
None of that tells you about force of Kings, as ever i hate to and wont give away the plot of a book in a review. What i will cover is: the totally immerse history, so well researched and written the reader is sucked back in time to live, breath fight and die hand in hand with Satyrus and his friends and enemies. My favorite underlying part of all Christians books is that there is no real good guy/ bad guy dynamic, he paints the shades of grey, weaving reality into the plot but without losing the wonder of the age.
The history is romantic and idealised, at times poetic, but that comes across as the authors love of the location and the period. None of it corrupts the plot, the woven intricacies of Stratokles, the machinations of “the doctor”, the self assured megalomania of Demetrius ‘the Besieger’ and the quiet self assured nature of Satyrus, always searching to be a better man, and running headlong into any fire going to do the right thing.
I love the way the author plays out his script, and at the same time makes the reader explore their own inner self, own decisions and the reasons behind them. I’m always left with some form of self examination afterwards, both myself and going back over decisions by characters, should they have made that choice, would i have made that choice. For me its the sign of a great book that challenges you to reread, to explore deeper and more thoroughly the plot and the people. A book that educates while it entertains.
This is the second book this year from this prolific author (great king already out and been an outstanding read) The Long Sword the second William Gold book is out in November 2014 and there are 3 more Tom Swan books due out also.
this is in my top 5 for this year, and will be competing for the top spot come the end of the year. A writer who makes you love history the way he loves it, seen through his eyes, and sharing his experiences. (visit his web site and you will see how intimately he will share the privations and wonders of Ancient Greece, and his commitment to learning the martial skills.)
“But they were also careful to tell their sons and daughters that in war there was blood and torment, fire and loss, many losers and few victors.”
Excerpt From: Cameron, Christian. “Tyrant: Force of Kings.” Orion Publishing Group, 2014-08-28T00:00:00+00:00. iBooks. This material may be protected by copyright.
Great ending to a very entertaining series. Cameron brings the major historic characters together for the final battle royal.
I believe Cameron's writing improves though the series and the last several novels are very polished and provide an even more entertaining and delightful narrative.
In this final chapter, as was through out the entire series, the interaction between various peoples of the period, makes this series highly engaging and entertaining for any fan of historical fiction of hellenistic period.
This is apparently the final book in the Tyrant series and it's a terrific way to conclude. Other reviews have noted that Cameron's writing has improved tremendously since the series began (with a couple of really weak entrants in the early years). Tons of intrigue, double-dealing and back-stabbing with a slate of characters I found nearly impossible to track. I finally quit trying and let the story whisk me along. I look forward to whatever Cameron has in the wings.