The Sword of Attila

by Michael Curtis Ford

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Only one man has the power and courage to preserve Rome from utter destruction-but to save the Empire, he must first overcome the Sword of Attila.In an epic campaign that historians have called the most crucial in history, two great warriors match strength and tactics in a colossal struggle for the fate of the known world.Ultimate authority in the fragile Western Empire rests on the shoulders of one man. Adhering to the ancient code of honor on which Rome was founded, he wages a show more single-minded struggle against barbarian invasions and internal decadence to prevent a catastrophic reign of terror. Respected and feared by friends and enemies alike, he is Count Flavius Aetius, Supreme General of the Legions-better known to history as the Last of the Romans.Facing him is a foe who has led his Asian hordes on a rampage of conquest and terror, from the barren steppes of the north to the very sands of Persia, ruthlessly destroying vast swaths of civilization. Now he and his army of fierce horsemen have penetrated deep into Europe and are poised to strike at the heart of the empire, the city of Rome itself. The entire world shudders at mention of this man's name-Attila the Hun. Horrified victims call him the Scourge of God.On a sweltering June day in A.D. 451, the fates of these two titans of antiquity collide in a conflict of such massive carnage and heroism as to dwarf nearly every other single battle in history. Though little known today, this monumental contest on a remote plain in Gaul determined the fate of Europe-and the very course of civilization. In The Sword of Attila, Michael Curtis Ford once again demonstrates his mastery as a chronicler of battle, honor, and ancient worlds. show less

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3 reviews
The story follows the lives of Aetius, field marshall of the western Roman forces in the mid-fifth century, and Attila the Hun. It paints Aetius and Attila as leading parallel lives, meeting briefly as children, when Attila and Aetius are exchanged as hostages to cement a treaty between the Romans and Huns, and becoming close friends years later when Attila returns and Aetius stays on in service of the Hunnish king. Yet later, they become rivals and enemies, their rivalry culminating in the historic battle of the Catalaunian Fields.

The book is interesting for breathing life into a critical period in late Roman history, and it is historically reasonably accurate, as far as I can tell, except that it gives credence to some numbers that show more are surely wildly inflated. For example, the battle of the Catalaunian Fields could not possibly have involved anything like 1.5 million combatants.

The book is middling in writing quality and structure. It is all a bit wooden and uninspired.
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Stunning! Superbly written, fast flowing and well worth a read. There is a second book in the series which follows on, The Fall of Rome.
½
Елементарно и не особено кадърно написано историческо романче, което сигурно ще се хареса на по-млади или по-непретенциозни читатели. Има го на български, но ме мързи да го добавям.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Sword of Attila
Alternate titles
The Sword of Attila: A Novel of the Last Years of Rome
People/Characters
Attila the Hun
Important places
Ancient Rome
Epigraph
Quae potest digna causa tantorum motibus inveniri? Aut quod odium in se cunctos animavit armari? Probatum est humanum genus regibus vivvere, quando unius mentis insano impetu strages sit facta populorum, et arbitrio supe... (show all)rbi regis, momento defecerit quod tot saeculis natura progenuit

What good reason can there be for the mobilization of so many nations? What hatred inspired them to take up arms against one another? It is proof that human beings live for their kings, for it is at the mad impulse of one mind that a slaughter of nations ensues, and at the whim of a proud ruler that what nature has taken ages to produce perishes in a moment
Dedication
For Eamon, Isabel, and Marie-Amandine
First words
The blackness of the heavens melded with the dark of the surrounding fields and woods, and the rain poured down on a scene of collective misery.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The king heeled his horse forward and, with the boy, began the long canter down the grassy hill, to join the column of wagons and horses winding down the road toward the eastern horizon.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PS3606 .O74 .S96Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
177
Popularity
184,336
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.54)
Languages
English, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
3