This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center (Monday, June 19, 2000)
 | | Tides of War: A Novel of Alcibiades and the Peloponnesian War
by Steven Pressfield |
Doubleday 432 pages, January 2000 Hardcover, 17.47 ISBN: 385492529
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the Ashbrook Center.
In Tides of War, Steven Pressfield brings the historical precision and heartbreaking human scale that made his previous novel Gates of Fire an international bestseller to an even more epic saga of Greek strife and conflict.
One man.
Two armies.
The fate of the ancient world in the balance.
If history is the biography of extraordinary men, the life of Alcibiades (451-404 B.C.) comprises an indispensable chapter in the
chronicle of the Western world. Kinsman of Pericles, protégé of Socrates, Alcibiades was acknowledged the most brilliant and
charismatic personality of his day. Plutarch, Plato, and Thucydides have all immortalized him. As the pride of Achilles drove the
course of the Trojan War, so Alcibiades' will and ambition set their stamp upon the Peloponnesian War—the twenty–seven–year civil
conflagration between the Athenian empires, Sparta, and the Peloponnesian league.
As a commander on land and sea, Alcibiades was never defeated. The destinies of Athens and her favored son were inextricably
intertwined. Man and city mirrored each other in boldness, ambition, and vulnerability. Allied, they swept from victory to victory.
Apart, he guided her foes to glory. Of the spell Alcibiades cast over his contemporaries, Aristophanes wrote that Athens “loves, and
hates, and cannot do without him.” To the end, their renown and ruin were indissoluble.
Recounted by Alcibiades' captain of marines in a mesmerizing death-row confession, Tides of War is historical fiction at its finest—a
multidimensional, flesh–and–blood renarration of one of history's pivotal conflicts.
Table of Contents
- 1. The Declaration and the American Character
- 2. Moral Sense Virtues and Character Formation
- 3. Work, Property, and Character: Agrarian Virtue and Commercial Virtue
- 4. Civic Virtue, Statesmanship, and Republican Self-Government
- 5. The Liberal Ideal: Duties to Self, Friendship, and Duties to God
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