Fulgentius
In Cesar Airas new novel, Fulgentius, a sixty-seven-year-old imperial Roman generalRomes most illustrious and experiencedis sent to pacify the remote province of Pannonia.He is a thoughtful, introspective person, a saturnine intellectual who greatly enjoys being on the march away from his loving family, and the sometimes deadly intrigues of Rome. Fulgentius is also a playwright (though of exactly one play) and in every city he pacifies, he stages a grand production of his farcical tragedy (written at the tender age of twelve) about a man who becomes a famous general only to be murdered at the hands of shadowy foreigners. Curiously, what he had imagined as a child turns out to be the story of his life, almost. As the playwright-turned-general broods obsessively about his only work, the magnificent Lupine Legiona city in movement of 6,000 men, an invincible corps of seasoned fighters wearing their signature wolfskin capskills, burns, pillages, and loots their way to victory. But what does victory mean?
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