
Clash of Eagles
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Narrado por:
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Kevin Orton
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De:
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Alan Smale
A rising star in the realm of alternate history, Alan Smale delivers fiction of broad sweep and epic scope.
Set in a world in which the Roman Empire never fell, Clash of Eagles finds Praetor Gaius Marcellinus leading his 33rd Legion into Nova Hesperia. But there his conception of the world is challenged by encounters with the Powhatani, Iroqua, and Cahokiani tribes.
©2015 Alan Smale (P)2015 Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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Very enjoyable
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excellent rewrite or imagining of history
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I realize it's set up for a sequel, but the ending was so destructive as to destroy any desire to read more. I may attempt the second just to see how he can resurrect the storyline, and because this book ends on such a sour note.
spoilers:
The unlikely elements are flying machines (make it fun though) and Greek fire used by cohkians. Also that their enemies would have been able to capture viking longboats, learn to sail them and the take them all the way from Chesapeake Bay--down around Florida and then up the Mississippi to Illinois in 2 years and build and use siege equipment without Roman/Viking aid and training. That our Roman hero was able to accomplish so many advancements was unlikely enough.
The ending: the good guys army and city were nearly completely destroyed. All of their technological advancements were destroyed and their Roman weapons and armor stolen.
Their defense of the city was pitiful. And Marcelinus ran around ineffectually and ended up a near invalid.
Interesting concept, captivating story, poor end
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Inventive idea. Lovely main character. Well researched.
Great story
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Not What I Was Looking For But A Good Story Anyway
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Mound Builders and Flight
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Good writing style but perhaps too much imagination for the subject.
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The narration was decent but with some oddly mispronounced words here and there.
The set up is that it is the early 13th Century, though I don’t think it’s mentioned specifically that I recall, and that the Roman Empire never fell. The Empire is currently at war with the Mongols but also searching the New World for gold.
That’s where we meet our main character at the head of a single legion in the heart of North America. Where he winds up in Cahokia, a city near modern day St. Louis, and his hungry and rebellious legion attacks the city because they need the corn for winter. Instead they are wiped out by a clever bunch of Cahokians who fly around in gliders launched from a giant mound (that at one point is mentioned to be 1000’ high) and they drop essentially napalm on the romans or shoot perfectly aimed fire arrows from a moving glider and wipe them all out.
Our author has recast these natives, who’s city was abandoned in 14th century before Europeans arrived in the New World in our timeline, as basically something they were not. In our author’s version of reality, these people are surprising liberal. They have women in roles of authority, as members of the military, clan chiefs, etc.. the mounds were for launching these gliders not as tombs and monuments which they really were as all mounds were.
But this particular and unusually large mound in real life is still about 90% smaller than the one in the book and it hides much DARKER story. One of an elite buried with 300 human sacrifices. That’s right, the real Cahokians engaged in human sacrifice and the mounds were just status symbols of the elite class.
I am all for an interesting alternate history, but why does that mean the author gets to change a people’s culture to suit his narrative? Even if on the surface it appears to cast those people in a more civilized light, it’s still a lie and it is honestly disrespectful to those people and, to some extent, the victims of their more dubious practices.
And as a student of anthropology, I just don’t think it was necessary and the whole flying bit was superfluous to the predictable plot of which the battles consisted of: bad thing happens, another bad thing, another, another, oh wait here’s a crazy idea with no explanation of how it was accomplished hence the term “plot device” and then good guys win.
Could have written the same essential story, but probably more interesting and certainly more believable, if the Roman actually was in a more realistic and brutal culture that this place and its people actually practiced.
Interesting idea but not believable and ultimately predictable.
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Rome invades the United States!
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One of the finest example of Alt-History genre
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