This eventful Roman adventure is already the 19th instalment of the wonderful "Eagles of the Empire" series, from the formidable author, Simon Scarrow.
At the beginning of the book you'll find a well-drawn map of Sardinia in the 1st Century AD, as well as a Cast List with real great historical and wonderful fictional characters who are featuring in this historical novel of Roman power and control.
Its another action-packed Roman adventure, but I miss the usual banter between Cato and Macro after Macro and Petronella's departure, and although the new one, an individual called Apollonius is doing his best to fill in the void, still in my view its different and not so sparkling and enjoyable as it is (was) between Cato and Macro.
Storytelling is for certain of a superb quality, all the characters are lifelike and believable, while the deadly atmosphere in Sardinia, with also the killing pestilence in their midst, comes splendidly off the pages.
This book is set in the year, AD 57, during the reign of Emperor Nero, and Prefect Cato and Senior Centurion Macro have returned to Rome from the Eastern campaign with General Corbulo, only to find an Imperial Court uneasy and hostile towards their achievements as well as towards Nero and his mistress, Claudia Acte.
Prefect Cato is stripped from his title of Prefect of the Praetorians, due to his actions in the East with General Corbulo, and as a consequence he's sent by Senator Seneca to Sardinia to escort Claudia Acte to her place of exile, but before that happens he and Macro will say their goodbyes, and part ways with Macro and Petronella heading for Britannia, to live and work there, leaving Cato with his important mission to Sardinia, with a select group of Centurions and the spy/assassin, Apollonius, to bring Roman law and order to this place, a place that's also ravaged by a deadly disease.
What is to follow is a Roman adventure with plenty of action, no doubt about that, but its also a book with a similar theme as in "Invictus", in what the local tribal revolt is concerned, but now adding to it is a deadly pestilence and with only Cato in the headlines an a supporting role for Apollonius, so that overall this engaging book is somewhat inferior to its predecessors in intensity, interaction, warfare and (real) historical battles against fearsome opponents like the Parthians, or the tribes from Germania, or the Celts from Britannia, and I can only hope that the author will return to that kind of formula again.
Really recommended, for this is another very good addition to this fantastic series, but not the very best in my opinion, and to come back to this episode I want to call it: "Heroic Cato In Exciting Sardinian Outing"!