SPQR series

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The SPQR series is a

Senatus Populusque Romanus
("The Roman Senate and People"), the official name of the Republic.

The stories are told in first-person form by Senator Decius Caecilius Metellus the Younger (born c 90-95 BC), nephew of

Augustus Caesar
. The stories range from 70 BC (The King's Gambit) to 20 BC ("The King of Sacrifices"), and have both an exciting and comedic tone.

Decius' companions include his slaves Cato, Cassandra, and Hermes; his friends, the Greek gladiatorial physician Asklepiodes and the gangster/politician Titus Annius Milo; and his staunch enemies, the siblings Clodia and Clodius. Along the way, he is often helped by his father, as well as by Cicero and a young Julius Caesar. In later books, Decius is betrothed and then married to the (fictional) niece of Caesar, Julia Caesaris. The dates are all listed at the end of each book in the ab urbe condita calendar system.

In 2015, a German company had planned to adapt the series for TV,[1][2] however, they have withdrawn from the project in 2022 for financial reasons.

Novels

  1. The King's Gambit: In 70 BC, Decius uncovers a plot to subvert
    Mithridates[3]
  2. The Catiline Conspiracy (63–62 BC): Decius uncovers Catiline's plot to overthrow the Republic.[4]
  3. The Sacrilege (62–61 BC): Decius investigates Clodius's desecration of the Bona Dea rites.[5]
  4. Alexandria, Decius investigates the murder of a philosopher at its famous library.[6]
  5. Saturnalia (59 BC): Decius investigates the murder of his kinsman Metellus Celer.[7]
  6. Nobody Loves a Centurion (58 BC): Decius investigates the murder of a centurion of the 10th Legion at the start of the Gallic Wars.[8]
  7. Crassus on his way to Parthia.[9]
  8. The River God's Vengeance (53 BC): Decius investigates a collapsed insula, uncovering systematic fraud in the construction trade.[10]
  9. The Princess and the Pirates (51 BC): Decius investigates the murder of his host, the Roman governor of
    Cleopatra VII of Egypt.[11]
  10. A Point of Law (51–50 BC): While running for election to the office of praetor, Decius must deal with accusations that he murdered a man who had threatened to denounce him for actions he took while on Cyprus the previous year.
  11. Under Vesuvius: In 50 BC, while touring
    Vesuvius.[12]
  12. Oracle of the Dead (50 BC). As
    praetor peregrinus, Decius investigates the murders of a group of priests of Apollo during the period just before Caesar crosses the Rubicon.[13]
  13. The Year of Confusion (46–45 BC): During Caesar's
    new calendar, and investigates the murders of several astronomers who developed it.[14]
  14. Dolabella (forthcoming)

Short stories

The series also includes the following short stories, in chronological order:

  • "The Statuette of Rhodes" (60 BC): Decius finds a corpse at the base of the Colossus of Rhodes.[15]
  • "Mightier Than the Sword" (53 BC): Decius investigates the murder of a victim found in the basement of a townhouse in Rome.[16]
  • "The Etruscan House" (52 BC): Decius investigates a senator's murder.[17]
  • "An Academic Question" (51 BC): Decius investigates a murder during his visit to Athens mentioned as part of his leisurely trip to Cyprus at the beginning of "The Princess and the Pirates"[18]
  • "Venus in Pearls" (46 BC): Caesar hires Decius to locate his stolen breastplate before his Pompeian triumph[19]
  • "Beware the Snake" (45 BC): Decius must locate the missing sacred snake of the Marsi.[20]
  • "The Will" (44 BC): Decius investigates Caesar's will following his assassination.[21]
  • "The King of Sacrifices" (20 BC): An elderly Decius investigates the death of a candidate for Rex Sacrorum[22]

Roberts also wrote a short story, "The Mountain Wolves", which is also set in ancient Rome, but is not part of the SPQR series.[23]

Chronology

The above dates are approximate because there is contradictory information within the texts.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Zum Goldenen Lamm - SPQR". Archived from the original on 2015-11-19. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  2. ^ "John Maddox Roberts". www.facebook.com.
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  15. ^ Published in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, July/August 2001, pg. 36
  16. George R.R. Martin & Gardner Dozois
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