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Seventy years after his death, Adolf Hitler remains a mystery. Historians, military tacticians, and...

Splash!: A Novel
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Sam Blunt is a drunken, broken-down tabloid reporter, working for a once-mighty newspaper struggling...

The Last Mortal Bond
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DEATH IS NEAR, ARMIES ARE GATHERED, AND THE FUTURE RESTS ON A KNIFE-EDGE The Annurian Empire is...

The White City
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LET'S FACE IT, NONE OF US DESERVE TO BE SAVED. None of us are wiser, smarter, stronger or prettier...

Those Above
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They enslaved humanity three thousand years ago. Tall, strong, perfect, superhuman and near immortal...

Julian Fellowes's Belgravia: A Tale of Secrets and Scandal Set in 1840s London from the Creator of Downton Abbey
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'A modern classic that will fill any Downton-shaped hole' DAILY EXPRESS On the evening of 15 June...

Moondance
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Bittersweet, at times funny, and always emotionally raw, this is by far the most moving and honest...

Habibi
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"Habibi", based on a Middle Eastern fable, tells the story of Dodola, who escapes being sold into...

Radio's Digital Dilemma: Broadcasting in the Twenty-First Century
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Radio's Digital Dilemma is the first comprehensive analysis of the United States' digital radio...

David McK (3557 KP) rated Dark Prince (Greek Series, #2) in Books
Jul 25, 2020
As the novel starts, Alexander is but a 4 year old and Parmenion is out of favour with Philip of Macedon, who is jealous of the Spartan general's success in battle. Alexander is still plagued by the Chaos Spirit, and - at around the 1/4 mark - is magically transported into an alternate Greece, where the myths and monsters of Greek legend are all real. With a little help from Aristotle and the Siptrassi stones, Parmenion is soon off on a rescue mission, accompanied by Philip's assassin Attalus (without Philips knowledge). The bulk of this novel - parts 2 and 3 (of 4) - then takes place in that alternate Greece, with Parmenion - again - reliving his past and playing a key role in proceedings, before it returns to 'our' Greece for the final part of the novel.
As is standard for Gemmell, lots of musing on the nature of Good and evil throughout, and with a conflicted central protagonist.