A novel based around a footnote in history
17 February 2011
This is a story about the rise and fall of Dionysius of Syracuse, a tyrant who unified the island of Sicily under Greek rule and then pushed the Carthaginians back to North Africa. While I have heard of him I don't for the life of me know of the ancient sources for this guy, and nobody that I have spoken to knows either (not that I have spoken to everybody that I know that could know about this).
While the book was entertaining, once again it is an historical novel, and though it was based on a real person, to me it does not stack up against the original sources. Further, due to the lack of sources that I know of that are available about Dionysius, it is difficult to know what is fact and what is simply made up to create the story.
Could one call this a tragedy? Quite possibly, but once again it does not stack up against the great tragedies of Shakespeare where the stage at the end of the play is littered with bodies, and it definitely does not stack up against what I consider the greatest of tragedies, King Lear, where at the end of the play your heart is torn over the death of his beloved daughter.
Does he have a fatal flaw? Not one that is consistent throughout the play, though one could consider that his desire for freedom for his Greek subjects is one, but in the end Dionysius becomes drunk with power, and it is this that in the end brings about his downfall (as it does with most dictators). That flaw is called hubris, but once again hubris is something that develops over time, particularly as the person who is caught up with hubris becomes more and more powerful, and in turn becomes more insane and paranoid about who wants to take his power away from him.
As mentioned about Manfredi's other book that I have read, it is a good book for somebody who knows little about the ancient world and is a good introduction to the intrigues and wars that were fought, but for one who is well versed in the classics, I would recommend simply going to the source.