Following up on their excellent “Theophano”, this graphic novel from Chrysa Sakel and Spyros Theocharis tells the first part of the story of Basil II, who brought the empire to its medieval peak. Though he died a grim, humorless, remote, and almost inhuman military leader, Basil was not always thus. Born to the purple, he started life, like his brother, Constantine VIII, as a spoiled child of the palace. But Basil had a troubled early life just the same. His father died when Basil was only 5. For the next almost 13 years, he and his brother were junior emperors, mere figurehead sources of legitimacy, to two successful generals: Nicephoros II Phokas, who was murdered and succeeded by John II Tzimiskes. Needless to say, Basil’s homelife was not happy. Told from the point of view of Sigurd, a Varangian who comes to serve in the palace and befriend Basil after being captured in battle, we get here the story of the intrigue and competing aristocratic and bureaucratic factions that vied for power in the time leading up to and after the death of John II, when Basil finally became senior emperor. The novel does an excellent job of laying out the complexities of the political situation, providing clarity without getting bogged down with exposition. Making Sigurd the POV character is a masterstroke that allows the beauty of Constantinople and the unsavoriness of Roman politics to be highlighted. The book is excellent all around, exceeding “Theophano” on all measures and really bringing Byzantium to life as never before. The authors have grown in their storytelling, and the same is true of Chrysa Sakel’s illustration… wow. She has exceeded herself here in the intricacy and vibrancy of each panel, the details and color imbuing every scene with life and power. The book is beautiful – I’ve gone through it many times to just behold it. I am looking forward to later volumes, both to better understand Basil II, whom I’ve always found opaque, and to see how much more powerful Sakel and Theocharis will become. I am glad that they are doing such fine work to bring Byzantium the attention it deserves.