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TYRANT by Conn Iggulden Kirkus Star

TYRANT

by Conn Iggulden

Pub Date: May 6th, 2025
ISBN: 9781639368891
Publisher: Pegasus

The middle entry in a trilogy—following Nero (2024)—about Roman Emperor Nero’s turbulent life.

In the year 50, the 30-something Agrippina marries the 60-something Emperor Claudius, who adopts her son, Lucius, and renames him Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus. The young lad is a handful, having managed with his friends to kill their tutor with a sack full of wasps. Luckily, he’s a minor and has his mother’s fierce protection. Quite the beauty, Agrippina “strangles poor Claudius in her skirts” and is rightly called “a destroyer.” Enemies seek to disgrace her and expose her to Claudius as a “faithless whore.” She kills him with foxglove powder supplied by her auspex, Locusta, opening the door for Nero to become emperor at age 16. But wait, what about Britannicus, the emperor’s biological son? Claudius said he’s next in line to be emperor, but the boy is an obstacle in the way of Agrippina’s ambition. Younger than Nero, Britannicus is but a pesky detail. Earlier, Nero tried to get him killed in a chariot race and nearly succeeded. Iggulden weaves a complex yarn based on events reported 50 years after the fact by writers such as Tacitus, so readers may wonder if the real Nero was as nasty as he appears to be. The best answer is to call it fiction and enjoy. Many details are marvelous, like the mock naval battles held in arenas that Roman engineers flood with sea water. It’s about the depravity of a mother and son seeking raw power and about the clash of wills that proves her undoing.

Great characters, superb storytelling.