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| ASIN: | 188393754X |
| ISBN 10: | 188393754X |
| ISBN 13: | 9781883937546 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publisher: | Bethlehem Books |
| Published: | 2001-02 |
| Number of Pages: | 190 |
| Width: | 5.6 inches |
| Height: | 0.6 inches |
| Length: | 8.3 inches |
| Weight: | 0.55 pounds |
| List Price: | $11.95 |
| Lowest Used Price: | |
| Sales Rank: | 552082 |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| First Added: |
2007-09-15 13:32:05 by Elwood |
From the back cover :
Palestine A.D. 70
They came to Macherus at the beginning of summer. It was a month later that, looking out through the shimmering heat down teh valley from under the tent awning, Philo saw the smoke in the sky that Hylas had imagined on the day before he left Philadelphia. The tribune heard him gasp and came out to stand beside him, looking above the ehat haze over the distant lake to the west.
"Yes, that must be it, Jerusalem has gone at last. Nothing but a whold city could make the sky look like that. Jupiter Ammom, I'm glad I'm not there now. There's no glory in a massacre, and in that city it'll be like scything a corn field."
Philo found that tears were running down his cheeks for the city he had never seen. "What's that for? asked Galienus. "You aren't a Jew?" Philo gulped hard and wiped his nose. "Of course, you brother's there! Well, perhaps now it's over at last we can close our fist round this place and make an end here too."
Palestine in the first century A.D. is as unsettled and divide as it is today. The Jews have revolted against Roman occupation and as they grow more restive, Rome clamps down harder. The ten Greek cities of Palestine--the Decapolis--want only to continue their peaceful trading existence, but they find themselves caught in the middle of the uprisings.
Apollodorus, a merchant of Philadelphia, takes a risk and rescues a man whom a Roman patrol has left to die in the desert. When Apollodorus is killed by robbers, his three sons are left almost penniless. Conan, Nicanor and Philo must each find a way for themselves. Philo, the youngest, is befriended by Xenos, the man saved from the desert, the man who has lost his memory. From him the boy learns the art of the scribe, and together they try to find their identity--one from the past and the other for the future. A serious story of an important time in history.
Sequal to The Ides of April
Ages 14-up
MyBookLog Reviews
Average Rating:

Total MyBookLog Reviews: 1
A boy becomes a man.This book was an easy read with interesting characters. Philo has to cope with the death of his father and the changes that brings to his family and his life. One brother joins the Israelites. One brother joins the Romans and Philo is caught in the middle. Luckily the man his father saved in the desert before he died is there to comfort and encourage Philo as he transitions from boyhood to manhood in a world a lot of us Americans can barely comprehend. |
Elwood's Rating :
(Sep 15, 2007) |



