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Lord of Emperors (The Sarantine Mosaic, Book II) by Guy Gavriel Kay
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Lord of Emperors (The Sarantine Mosaic, Book II)

by Guy Gavriel Kay

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LibraryThing recommendations

  1. Sailing to Sarantium by Guy Gavriel Kay
  2. The Lions of Al-Rassan by Guy Gavriel Kay
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Member recommendations:

Busifer recommends Sailing from Byzantium : how a lost Empire shaped the world by Colin Wells, "Reading this book makes you realize how much of what Kay wrote in The Sarantine Mosaic was lifted from 'real' history, but it also deepens your knowledge (see more) of the era and what it has meant to modern society."

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Amazon.com (ISBN 0061051217, Hardcover)

For whatever reason, Guy Gavriel Kay just insists on getting better and better. Sailing to Sarantium outshone the already excellent Lions of Al-Rassan, and now Lord of Emperors--the stunning second half of the Sarantine Mosaic--somehow surpasses even its predecessors.

Emperors picks up the story of the overwhelmed but still tenacious Crispin, now Imperial Mosaicist to Valerius II and thoroughly steeped in the machinations of Sarantium--not to mention being personally entangled in the lives of the emperor, the empress, and now his own queen, the exiled Gisel. Lord of Emperors also sends a new protagonist sailing into Sarantium, an unassuming country doctor who--like Caius--has found himself thrust into a position of great potential and peril, a victim of both circumstance and his own competence and moxie. The two struggle to stay afloat in Sarantium's swirling intrigues, as Valerius prepares for war in Crispin's homeland and unexplained, ghostly fires flicker around the city.

A touching, literate, and doggedly intelligent book, Lord of Emperors continues to prove Kay's mastery of historical fantasy (Sarantium being a well-researched analog to sixth-century Byzantium under Justinian and Theodora), as he gracefully spins a rich, convincing weave of legend and history. While other fantasy titles might have us imagine our lives as great heroes, Kay leaves a far more lasting impression by celebrating the heroics and passions of ordinary people who possess extraordinary character and spirit. --Paul Hughes

(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 19 Nov 2007 03:58:12 -0500)

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