The Evening of the World

The Evening of the World

by Allan Massie (Author)

Synopsis

THE EVENING OF THE WORLD is set in the period of the barbarian invasions. Its hero is a young Roman nobleman named Marcus. He undergoes extraordinary experiences as he searches for meaning and stability in a twilight world where the old gods are dead or dying, but their mysteries still attract, and the new religion is threatened by new barbarisms. Marcus's journeys take him over the empire, from Italy to Greece and Byzantium, to the camp of Alaric the Goth and the wastes of the northern forests, from a Christian monastery to the horde of Attila the Hun. His is a world where everything is possible and nothing solid, a world that is full of danger and mystery, of love and terror, of simple faith and abstruse philosophy, of cruelty, strange perversions, treachery and undaunted courage.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
Edition: 2
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 01 Jul 2004

ISBN 10: 0753813106
ISBN 13: 9780753813102
Book Overview: Allan Massie has a reputation for fine historical literary fiction - the Robert Graves of his times. The Evening of the World has reprinted 3 times 'A romance in the old sense, the novel abounds in digressions and stories within stories from travelling companions' DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Entertaining, informative, vivid and well-realized, THE EVENING OF THE WORLD will not disappoint the many admirers Allan Massie's novels have attracted' TLS 'Skilfully plotted, intriguing and intelligent, this is a novel that keeps the reader turning the pages as well as satisfying the intellect. The subsequent books in the trilogy have a high standard to maintain' SCOTSMAN 'A funny, sad, exuberant and richly told tale' INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY

Media Reviews
A mighty entertainment--and a humbling feat.
Author Bio
Allan Massie is the author of seventeen highly praised novels, as well as non-fiction works on Muriel Spark, a study of twelve emperors of ancient Rome, a history of crime in 19th-century Edinburgh and the acclaimed Glasgow: Portraits of a City. Born in Singapore in 1938, he was brought up in Aberdeenshire and educated at Glenalmond School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he read history. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and has been a judge of the Booker Prize. He is also a journalist contributing to the Scottish and English press. He is married, has three children and lives in the Scottish Borders.