Book description
In the international bestseller Roma, Steven Saylor told the story
of the first thousand years of Rome by following the descendants of a
single bloodline. Now, in Empire, Saylor charts the destinies of five
more generations of the Pinarius family, from the reign of the first
emperor, Augustus, to the glorious height of Rome's empire under
Hadrian. Through the eyes of the Pinarii, we witness the machinations
of Tiberius, the madness of Caligula, the cruel escapades of Nero, and
the chaos of the Year of Four Emperors in 69 A. D. The deadly paranoia
of Domitian is followed by the Golden Age of Trajan and Hadrian--but
even the most enlightened emperors wield the power to inflict death
and destruction on a whim. Empire is strewn with spectacular scenes,
including the Great Fire of 64 A. D. that ravaged the city, Nero's
terrifying persecution of the Christians, and the mind-blowing opening
games of the Colosseum. But at the novel's heart are the wrenching
choices and seductive temptations faced by each new generation of the
Pinarii. One unwittingly becomes the sexual plaything of the notorious
Messalina. One enters into a clandestine affair with a Vestal virgin.
One falls under the charismatic spell of Nero, while another is drawn
into the strange new cult of those who deny the gods and call
themselves Christians. However diverse their destinies and desires,
all the Pinarii are united by one thing: the mysterious golden
talisman called the fascinum handed down from a time before Rome
existed. As it passes from generation to generation, the fascinum
seems to exercise a power not only over those who wear it, but over
the very fate of the empire.