Yo, Claudio

Novela, Novela histórica por Robert von Ranke Graves

Resumen

Llegado a los últimos años de su vida y temeroso de caer asesinado víctima de una conspiración, el emperador Claudio (o" Clau-Clau-Claudio" , o" Claudio el idiota" ) decide consignar por escrito su larga y azarosa vida desde los días en que gobernaba su tío abuelo Augusto, a cuya sombra su esposa Livia movía los hilos del p oder. En esta novela inolvidable vemos desfilar delante de nosotros todo el esplendor y miseria de los primeros años del Imperio Romano, embarcado muy pronto en una espiral de conspiraciones, crueldad y violencia bajo los reinados del taciturno Tiberio y del extravagante Calígula. Lectura apasionante desde su primera línea," Yo, Claudio" es sin duda una de las cinco mejores novelas históricas de todos los tiempos.

Primera publicación

1934

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joselu

Joselu

Novelón de los de verdad. Intrigas, historia, Roma. Un gran escritor y lo que es una buena novela histórica, con permiso de Youcenar.

0 Respuestas posted en enero
endovelico

Endovelico

I, Claudius follows the life of the fourth Emperor of the Roman Empire, Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus, prior to his awkward 'coronation'. Claudius himself is the perfect anti-hero; Yes, he is honest, sincere and wise but what allowed Claudius to get by was his sycophant, coward and at times self-demeaning and pathetic attitudes. This is a strong point of the book in my opinion; The characters psychological portrait isn't in black and white and linear; It's layered and shaded in gray. Even, the most evil characters in the book are given soft strokes of white. This humanizes the characters and makes the reading experience much more immersive and credible. One great feat of this book is that it maintains an epic feel throughout, eventhough it doesn't really focus on the croud-pleasing war and adventure themes. Instead it focus on family strife and political conflict, akin to a mafia themed novel (I'm just going to leave it at that). You get to learn and read about the transition of the Roman republic to the Roman empire and how to better interpret the transition; You get to learn a bit about the inner workings of the Roman political system, the Roman ambiguous mythological and superstitious ideals, and finally about the first emperors reign. In short, if you're still new to Roman history you get to learn alot, if you're an history buff you will probably revisit alot of accumulated knowledge but you will still take alot out of the book. Which this takes me to the narrative; The book is just beautifully written (Semantically, since I'm reading a translation) which is more amazing if you consider that Robert Graves wrote the book on a deadline strictly for financial needs. He even (brilliantly) circumvents narrative issues like making sure you are aware of the copious amount of characters (most of which share similar names) and of their relation to each other (Constant incest, makes it a tad hard to keep track) in a very clever, non condescending way. The book provides a defolding page with Claudius' family tree, which is a nice touch, but really doesn't enlighten you more as the family relations are just too complex. In terms of historical accuracy, it IS based on Claudius' autobiography and while I'm not knowledgeable enough to decide whether some anecdotes are fact or fiction the fact of the matter is that i really didn't feel the need to. It's just a fantastic work, one that leaves you nostalgic as soon as you turn to the back cover. Epic, instructive, fascinating, immersive, well-written, fun are the keywords for anyone looking to read this book.

0 Respuestas posted en noviembre
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