Spartacus

Capa
M.E. Sharpe, 24 de set. de 1996 - 517 páginas
Spartacus, a fictionalization of a slave revolt in ancient Rome in 71 BC, is well known today because of the 1960 movie starring Kirk Douglas and Laurence Olivier. It was originally published in 1951 by Fast himself, after being turned down by every mainstream publisher of the day because of Fast's blacklisting for his Communist Party sympathies. The story of Spartacus, born a slave, trained as a gladiator, who led a slave revolt that was eventually put down by Crassus, was immensely popular, and went on to sell millions of copies. The reprinting of this title in the North Castle series brings.
 

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Conteúdo

PART ONE How Caius Crassus journeyed along the highroad from Rome to Capua in the month of May
3
PART TWO Being the story which Crassus the great general told to Caius Crassus concerning a visit to his encampment by Lentulus Batiatus who kep...
53
PART THREE Being the tale of the first journey to Capua made by Marius Bracus and Caius Crassus some four years before the evening at the Villa ...
91
PART FOUR Which concerns Marcus Tullius Cicero and his interest in the origin of the Great Servile War
129
PART FIVE Being an account of Lentelus Gracchus some of his memories and some particulars of his stay at the Villa Salaria
173
PART SIX Which tells of the journey to Capua by part of the company at the Villa Salaria of some details of that beautiful city and of how the travell...
229
PART SEVEN Which deals with the journey of Cicero and Gracchus back to Rome of what they spoke of along the way and then of the dream of Sp...
299
PART ElGHT In which Varinia finds freedom
357
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Sobre o autor (1996)

Howard Fast was born on November 11, 1914 in Manhattan. At the age of 17, he sold his first story to Amazing Stories magazine. The next year he sold his first novel, Two Villages, to the Dial Press for a $100 advance. During his lifetime, he wrote more than 80 books, including Conceived in Liberty, The Unvanquished, Citizen Tom Paine, Freedom Road, April Morning, The Immigrants, Second Generation, The Establishment, The Legacy, and Greenwich. He won the Stalin International Peace Prize in 1953. A member of the Communist party, he served three months in a federal prison in 1950 for refusing to testify about his political activity. Blacklisted as a result, he founded his own publishing house, Blue Heron Press, which released his novel Spartacus in 1951. In 1957, he wrote a book about his political experiences entitled The Naked God. He also wrote a series of detective stories under the name E. V. Cunningham. He died on March 12, 2003 at the age of 88.

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