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The Gates of Hell

de Paul Doherty

Séries: Telamon Trilogy (3)

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742360,005 (3.38)6
A campaign of murder as Alexander nears his greatest challenge It is 334 BC. Alexander the Great and his troops march towards the strategically important city of Halicarnassus, with the aim of bringing it to its knees. But the city's commanders, Memnon of Rhodes, the Persian Orontobates and the Greek renegade, Ephialtes, plot to ensure that Alexander will meet his nemesis at their gates. A series of brutal killings begins proving that the Persians have infiltrated Alexander's court. With his lord facing the fight of his life, Alexander's boyhood friend Telamon must go through "the Gates of Hell" to find the traitors - but all the while the ever-cunning Alexander keeps his counsel and pursues his own plans to foil his enemies.… (mais)
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Exibindo 2 de 2
An account of Alexander taking Halicarnassus with a murder mystery thrown in. The story is atmospheric, dramatic and exciting. What makes it so interesting is that the story is about historic figures that have become legendary. The murder mystery fits in very well with the accurate battle description of 334 BC. ( )
1 vote VivienneR | Mar 29, 2016 |
En el año 334 a.C., tras la batalla del Granico, Alejandro Magno se ha marcado un nuevo objetivo militar: Éfeso; pero tanto él como sus rivales saben que antes deberá someter una ciudad de gran valor estratégico, Halicarnaso, un bastión prácticamente inexpugnable. Sin embargo, no es esto lo único que preocupa al célebre general, pues los asesinatos que se están produciendo en su círculo más cercano demuestran a las claras que el enemigo ha logrado infiltrar a sus secuaces entre las filas de Alejandro, lo que a su vez puede poner en peligro cualquier operación militar. Doherty enfrenta al lector a uno de los episodios más sanguinarios, emocionantes y turbulentos de la historia de un militar incomparable y lo hace con un ritmo intenso y sin concesiones
  kika66 | Feb 18, 2011 |
Exibindo 2 de 2
In 334 B.C., Alexander the Great's march toward world conquest halts before the formidable battlements of Halicarnassus in the third installment of British author Doherty's riveting historical series featuring the sleuthing of Telamon the physician. Scholars race to decipher the enigmatic Pythian Manuscript, which holds the secrets of a fatal weakness in the city's defenses, as well as the location of a fabulous treasure, while spies haunt the Macedonians' camp and counter-spies lurk within the walled fortress. The body of the scribe Pamenes is found on the pavement below his locked room, the so-called ghost-chamber (whose floorboards creak like a ship's rigging when walked upon), and Telamon must decide if his death is accident or murder. Soon other more obvious murders occur, including another body found strangled in the ghost-chamber (even the mysterious death of the villa's cat!). Amid the battles and siege of the city, crucifixion of captured spies and dispatching of soldiers whose wounds cannot be cured, the physician keeps to his investigations. "I cannot explain the deaths of thousands. I can only concentrate on the task in hand. It keeps me sane." Telamon, who wasn't quite a dominant element in the previous novels (The House of Death and The Godless Man), comes to full literary life in these pages, as the prolific Doherty moves masterfully from a terrifically atmospheric prologue through the fiery fall of Halicarnassus. As usual with this assured writer, the solution to the crimes is extremely satisfying.
adicionado por VivienneR | editarPublisher's Weekly
 
It’s 334 b.c. As confident Alexander the Great prepares to attack the wealthy city of Halicarnassus, a secret killer threatens his tightly organized assault.

Knowing that their army is no match for the Macedonian conqueror, the brain trust of Halicarnassus—Machiavellian spymaster Lord Mithra, commander-in-chief Memnon, and governor Orontobates—send secret operatives into the heart of Alexander’s camp. Much speculation swirls around a treasured and encoded Pythian manuscript Alexander has. Memnon, securing a copy, wants to translate it, thinking it may contain the strategic secret to victory in the upcoming battle or the true identity of the assassin of King Philip, Alexander’s father. When Pamenes, a scribe who’s been working to decode the manuscript, dies in a suspicious fall, Alexander’s physician and close friend Telamon suspects foul play and begins to investigate. Before long, he’s dealing with venomous snakes, poisoned cheese, and more dead bodies. As interested in dramatizing the preparations for the siege as the search for the killer, Doherty mixes Alexander’s crises with Memnon’s strategies in Halicarnassus. The colorful murder suspects include a vain and oversexed acting couple named Gentius and Demerata and the aptly named Cassandra, an advisor who often foretells disaster.

In this third series entry (The Godless Man, 2002, etc.), Doherty effectively accelerates the tension and the bloodshed as Telamon approaches the solution. Astute puzzle fans may even be able to crack the code.
adicionado por VivienneR | editarKirkus Reviews
 

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A campaign of murder as Alexander nears his greatest challenge It is 334 BC. Alexander the Great and his troops march towards the strategically important city of Halicarnassus, with the aim of bringing it to its knees. But the city's commanders, Memnon of Rhodes, the Persian Orontobates and the Greek renegade, Ephialtes, plot to ensure that Alexander will meet his nemesis at their gates. A series of brutal killings begins proving that the Persians have infiltrated Alexander's court. With his lord facing the fight of his life, Alexander's boyhood friend Telamon must go through "the Gates of Hell" to find the traitors - but all the while the ever-cunning Alexander keeps his counsel and pursues his own plans to foil his enemies.

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