The lives selected in this audio-book are different from those in the print edition.
The rivalry between Pompey and Caesar were presented twice, each from the protagonist's view. That Caesar died at the foot of Pompey's statue was new to me. Some of the details of the assassination were too vivid to be based on historical facts, and Plutarch must have waded into fiction writing.
But we should thank him for that, for it makes the stories more engrossing, especially when it came to the love story between Antony and Cleopatra.
On the whole, the flourishes of storytelling are not blemishes on the main story-line, because we can study themselves as paintbrushes of Plutarch.