Hunting the Eagles
by Ben Kane
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Pub Date Mar 24 2016 | Archive Date Mar 23 2016
Random House UK, Cornerstone | Preface Publishing
Description
From 'the rising star of historical fiction' (Wilbur Smith) a new Eagles of Rome novel, by the Sunday Times bestselling author of Eagles at War.
AN ARMY DEFEATED
AD 14: Five long years have passed since the annihilation of three legions in the wilds of Germania. Although the bones of 15,000 soldiers now moulder in the Teutoburg Forest, not all the Romans were slain in the bloody ambush.
A CENTURION OUT FOR VENGEANCE
Demoted, battle-scarred and hell-bent on revenge, Centurion Tullus and his legionaries begin their fightback. Ranged against them is the charismatic chieftan Arminius, who is gathering thousands of hostile tribesmen, and determined to crush the Romans for a second time.
AN EAGLE RECOVERED
The eagle belonging to Tullus' old legion is still in enemy hands, but as the Romans' reprisals take their army deep into German tribal lands, he remains convinced that it is within reach. But Arminius and his warriors are perilously close. As battle begins, Tullus and his comrades know they must fight as never before - just to stay alive...
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9781848094062 |
PRICE | £12.99 (GBP) |
Average rating from 9 members
Featured Reviews
It is difficult to write this level of fiction without it sounding like a history lesson, or without losing your reader to facts, figures and descriptions that they cannot hope to understand unless they have a degree in the subject. Ben Kane immerses you in the Ancient World, he doesn’t describe it – he does something extraordinary – he brings it back to life. He draws his readers into the thick of the action. Kane doesn’t let you get lost in the history, or leave you floundering around like a fish out of water. It is like having your own personal tour guide to the past. With Kane, I knew I was in safe hands.
Strangely, I did not feel that there was any one antagonist in this story – I was moved by the plight of Centurion Tullus and his legionaries, as well as his enemy, Chieftain Arminius. I cannot think of many books where my loyalty has been so split. Both characters had flesh on them; both had their own reasons to hate the other. The portrayal of these characters was sublime. Totally believable.
The battle scenes were vivid and were very real in the telling. It was like being there, without the threat of being brutally maimed or killed, of course!
Hunting the Eagle is part of a series, but not once did I feel that I had missed out on anything by not reading the prequel. Although, saying that, Eagles at War is now definitely on my ‘to be read’ list!
I will definitely be recommending this book.
The way in which the novel is written enables the reader to visualise the trials and tribulations encountered by the Legionnaires, who are out to avenge their dreadful defeat 5 years previous. The story centres around one survivor of the battle in Germania, Centurion Tullus who survived the ambush and is determined to get revenge after the loss of his legion’s Eagle, captured by Arminius.
The reader is taken through the battles seemingly being won by the vast Roman legions but the enemy gathers many soldiers to fight back and keep the Legions’ Eagles.
A gripping story, well told. Highly Recommend this book.
Hunting the Eagles by Ben Kane
Few Roman soldiers survived the slaughter of the Battle of Teutoberg Forest in AD 9. When ally Arminius turned traitor and united the Germanic tribes against the Romans, no quarter was given. The bones of the Roman dead, in their thousands, were left to turn white in a terrain as hostile as the men who mercilessly cut the soldiers down. Three eagles were stolen, a disgrace for the survivors to bear. Centurion Tullus lived to tell the tale but, even though he saved the lives of more men than any other officer on that bloody campaign, he is still demoted and dishonoured. But five years have passed, Augustus is dead and Tiberius is emperor. Tullus is given the opportunity to regain his pride. Rome wants its eagles returned and Arminius destroyed. No one shares in Rome’s dreams of vengeance more than Tullus and so, once again, he crosses the Rhine and enters the forest killing lands.
Much has changed for the Roman army, particularly those soldiers stationed along the Rhine. Along with the change in imperial leadership and a new General (Germanicus), the soldiers must also get to know new comrades as the legions are reshaped after the massacre five years before. Not being paid for months doesn’t help and soon there is the real risk of mutiny. We watch the situation deteriorate, through Tullus and also through the men under his command, most of whom fought alongside Tullus in the forest. There is great danger here, not only from Arminius who once more is raising the tribes against his bitter enemy, but also from within the ranks. Rome seems very far away indeed. Safety, even further.
Eagles at War, the first novel in Ben Kane’s series on the Battle of Teutoberg and its aftermath, was a masterpiece. The battle comes alive in page after page of thrilling, bloody, horrifying and tense drama. I’ve always been fascinated by this battle but for the first time I was made to realise how utterly terrifying it would have been for the soldiers, fighting back to back to stay alive against an enemy that couldn’t be seen until too late. They could certainly be heard, though, and the sound made by the tribes as they moved in for the kill stuck with me from this wonderful book. To be honest, I didn’t know how Ben Kane could follow Eagles at War or the battle it describes. But I needn’t have worried. In Hunting the Eagles, Ben Kane achieves the incredible – a novel every bit as good as the one that went before and just as exciting and exhilarating to read.
The impact of the battle has been severe, for the tribes and for the Roman soldiers stationed on the Rhine border, and we are vividly shown the extent of the trauma. The mutiny is brilliantly portrayed as are the scenes within the forest as Tullus and the other soldiers pay the price for the decision to seek out and bury the remains of their fallen comrades in the forest. But the book doesn’t just show the point of view of the Romans, it also gives us Arminius, his family, and the perspective of the tribes. In this book, more than in the predecessor, the brutality of the Romans is made clear. And not just against the enemy either. The mutiny is every bit as bloody. Tullus and his men are caught in the middle and try to do their best to calm the situation and save lives, even amongst the enemy.
These soldiers have been traumatised by the events of five years before, a state that has been compounded by their disgrace, and Ben Kane does a brilliant job of continuing their stories. It is so good to see Tullus, Piso and the others again, while I enjoyed getting to know Germanicus, father of the little boy known to the soldiers as Caligula. The situation is lethal. Not everyone can survive and so there are some heart wrenching moments alongside the excitement of the battle. The visit of the soldiers to the site of the original battle is powerful stuff. Arminius himself is much more rounded in this novel. We see a little more of his motives.
Hunting the Eagles is a fantastic novel, a triumph of Roman historical fiction, as thrilling as you could ask for, while still showing how complicated the situation was, how frenzied, on the borders of the empire. The setting is so well done. Ben Kane’s thorough research into the period, warfare and the location really pays off. Hunting the Eagles is not only a terrific follow up to Eagles of War, one of the best books of 2015 in my opinion, but also superb in its own right.
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