Alexander the Great: The Mirror of Power
How a Man Became a Myth and a Myth Shaped the World
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Julian Arcadius
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
What does it mean to conquer the world—if you cannot master yourself?
He was born in a smoky palace in Pella, taught by Aristotle, and told that he was descended from gods. By the age of thirty, he ruled more of the known world than anyone before him. Yet behind the bronze armor and immortal legends was a man who bled, grieved, and dreamed of something larger than conquest.
In Alexander the Great: The Mirror of Power, historian and storyteller Julian Arcadius delivers a sweeping, vivid portrait of the most extraordinary figure in human history—a man whose brilliance and flaws were bound together in equal measure. Drawing on ancient sources and modern insight, Arcadius traces Alexander’s transformation from the curious boy who tamed Bucephalus to the restless king who cut the Gordian Knot, burned Persepolis, and died in Babylon surrounded by weeping soldiers.
This is not the sanitized hero of classroom mythology nor the cold tactician of military study. This is Alexander as he lived: a philosopher-warrior who carried a dagger and a copy of The Iliad beneath his pillow, a visionary who sought to fuse East and West under one banner, and a volatile, brilliant young man haunted by the limits of his own humanity. Through battles, letters, friendships, and betrayals, Arcadius reveals how Alexander’s life became the template for every conqueror who followed—and how his myth still shapes our understanding of power, destiny, and greatness itself.
With cinematic detail and psychological depth, The Mirror of Power follows Alexander from his birth under fiery omens to his final breath in Babylon. You will walk through the smoke of Thebes, the dust of Gaugamela, and the glitter of Alexandria; you will hear the clatter of cavalry, the whispers of philosophers, and the silence of a man who finally sees his own reflection.
For readers of Mary Renault, Anthony Everitt, and Stacy Schiff, Alexander the Great: The Mirror of Power is both an epic history and a haunting meditation on ambition, legacy, and the cost of immortality.