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Saturnalia: A Marcus Didius Falco Novel (Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries)
Saturnalia: A Marcus Didius Falco Novel (Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries)

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Author: Lindsey Davis
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Category: Book

List Price: $7.99
Buy New: $3.98
You Save: $4.01 (50%)



New (26) Used (6) from $3.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 20 reviews
Sales Rank: 27361

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 6.6 x 4.1 x 1.1

ISBN: 0312945957
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780312945954
ASIN: 0312945957

Publication Date: April 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: New book w/perfect interior; exterior has slight wear

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Saturnalia: A Marcus Didius Falco Novel (Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
It’s 76 A.D. during the reign of Vespasian and the Roman festival of Saturnalia is getting underway. The days are short; the nights are for wild parties. But not for “informer” Marcus Didius Falco. His job is to uncover unwelcome truths and deal with sensitive situations, frequently at the behest of the imperial government. So when a general’s famous female conquest escapes from house arrest—leaving a horrendous murder in her wake—Falco is on the case. If finding a fugitive isn’t enough of a Zeus-like headache, Falco’s wife Helena Justina’s brother has also gone missing. Against the riotous backdrop of the season of misrule and merriment, the search seems impossible. And Falco seems to be the only one who notices that some dark agency is bringing death to the city streets…



Customer Reviews:   Read 15 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Falco at the festival   July 15, 2008
Falco is once again stuck in the middle of a search for a missing person (Veleda, the priestess character from an earlier book), and also, by almost a sideline, a grisly murder. All of the action takes place during the seven day festivel of Saturnalia, when Romans do a lot of unusual things, and even slaves get to act as masters for a bit. The book has the usual mix of the regular loons and misfits, with a few new ones thrown in for good measure. No one is ever going to mistake this series for great literature, but I enjoy these works very much, and the humor gives me a funny relief from the daily grind.Keep them coming!


5 out of 5 stars Saturnalia   June 30, 2008
1st book came with a printing flaw but received the replacement book within 3 days... and I was even notified when the book I returned was received by you! Thanks Amazon... I have never had a complaint about the services I have received from you!


4 out of 5 stars Falco 18, and an old acquaintance is on the run in Rome   June 24, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful


This is the eighteenth and currently (June 2008) most recent in a series of excellent detective stories set in Vespasian's Roman Empire and featuring the informer Marcus Didius Falco. Informers in ancient Rome were something between a private detective and a government spy.

It is AD76, at the start of the Roman holiday of Saturnalia. Falco finds out that a figure from his past - and more particularly, his brother-in-law's past - has been brought to Rome to play the supporting role in a Roman Triumph followed by the starring role in an execution ...

In the fourth book in the series, "The Iron Hand of Mars" set five years before, Marcus Didius Falco had been sent on an undercover mission to the wilds of Germany, an area which the Roman Empire had definately not managed to pacify. The mission led Falco, with his then girlfriend Helena Justina (now his wife), and her brother Camillus, to the beautiful but sinister tribal prophetess Veleda, and Camillus promptly fell in love with her.

Back in 71AD, Falco had brokered a deal with Veleda: she would stop inciting the German tribes to attack the Roman Empire, the Empire would leave her alone. Five years on , Veleda may or may not have kept her side of the bargain, but an ambitious and incompetent governor decides to boost his prestige by tricking Veleda into coming to Rome as a hostage, with the intention of presenting her capture as a great victory and having her executed. The governor then goes off on holiday without making adequate arrangements for Veleda's security, and - surprise surprise - on hearing what is actually planned for her, she escapes.

As one of the few Roman officials who has actually met the lady, Falco is charged with recapturing her and given the doubtful assistance of a dozen legionaries who escorted her from Germany to Rome - who are billeted on Falco's home with the instruction "you will have to pretend that they are your relatives." And all this during a festival dedicated to mischief ...

I tried this series because I had enjoyed Ellis Peter's "Brother Cadfael" detective stories. Where Cadfael is excellent, Falco is brilliant. Ellis Peters herself (or to use her real name, Edith Pargeter) said of the early books of the series, 'Lindsey Davis continues her exploration of Vespasian's Rome and Marcus Didius Falco's Italy with the same wit and gusto that made "The Silver Pigs" such a dazzling debut and her rueful, self-deprecating hero so irresistibly likeable.'

Funny, exciting, and based on a painstaking effort to re-create the world of the early Roman empire between 70 and 76 AD.

If you have met and enjoyed either the Cadfael or Thraxas series, this is even better.

It isn't absolutely essential to read these stories in sequence, as the mysteries Falco is trying to solve are all self-contained stories and each can stand on its own. Having said that, there is some ongoing development of characters and relationships and I think reading them in the right order does improve the experience.

The full Falco series, in chronological order, consists at the moment of:

The Silver Pigs
Shadows in Bronze
Venus in Copper
The Iron Hand of Mars
Poseidon's Gold
Last Act in Palmyra
Time to Depart
A Dying Light in Corduba
Three Hands in the Fountain
Two for the Lions
One Virgin Too Many
Ode to a Banker
A Body in the Bath house
The Jupiter Myth
The Accusers
Scandal taks a Holiday
See Delphi and Die
Saturnalia

I have read and can warmly recommend all of these.



5 out of 5 stars Take a Roman Holiday   June 14, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

The most surprising aspect of this almost perfect mystery is that it is the eighteenth in the Marcus Didius Falco series. Some series lose focus. Some fictional heroes are useless once matrimony and children occur. Happily for the reader, that is not true here.

An enemy of Rome is on the loose, a wild priestess of unconquered Germany. Falco knows her from one of his foreign missions and is one of the few men in Rome who could recognize her. Falco has been ordered by the Emperor to track her down by the end of the Saturnalia festival. However, if Falco knows what's good for him, he'll find her sooner--his brother-in-law who may have once had an affair with the priestess has also disappeared. The wrath of the Emperor pales beside the anger of Falco's wife and in-laws.

Falco also needs to find a suitable gift for his wife, cope with the clamor of his vast extended family and find out who dumped the head of young Gratianus Scaeva in the fountain. The enterprising twists in the mystery compete with the engaging comic turns of a Roman family celebrating an extended holiday. Historical, yes, but also hysterical. Keep your eye on the turnip.



4 out of 5 stars good Lindsey Davis   June 9, 2008
This is a good historical Roman whodunnit. The plot is a bit more complex than some of Davis's previous books.

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