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Duncan Sprott

    January 1, 1952

    Duncan Sprott crafts historical reconstructions, delving into the past with meticulous attention to detail to bring forgotten narratives to life. His writing style is marked by a deep immersion in historical sources, creating compelling tales that transport readers to other eras. Sprott's work offers a unique window into bygone times, meticulously researched and vividly rendered. He resides in Ireland.

    Duncan Sprott
    Ptolemaiovský kvartet : I. Dynastie orla. II. Dcera krokodýla (dva svazky)
    Das Haus des Adlers
    Die Ptolemäer. Der Satrap von Ägypten
    Die irische Mätresse
    The House of the Eagle
    Daughter of the Crocodile
    • 2007

      Daughter of the Crocodile

      • 496 pages
      • 18 hours of reading
      4.0(57)Add rating

      The Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt. and Ptolemy Philandelphus finds his wife ousted by his reptillian sister, who wants to marry him herself . But with the glory of the Ptolemies at its height after Egypt wins victories at Syria, it is the turn of the murderess to be murdered.Meanwhile, the people of Egypt are thinking about revolution .

      Daughter of the Crocodile
    • 2004

      The House of the Eagle begins Duncan Sprott's 'Ptolemies Quartet', an epic and ingenious restoration of the dark and glittering story of ancient Alexandria and the Greek Pharaohs of Egypt, whose extraordinary dynasty spans twelve generations from the death of Alexander the Great to the fall of Cleopatra. Narrated by Thoth, the ibis-headed Egyptian god of writing and wisdom, this book details the rise of the shrewd Ptolemy I from ordinary soldier of Macedon to Satrap of Egypt, and his coronation as Pharaoh and a god in his own lifetime. A triumph of historical salvage, The House of the Eagle brings vividly to life the most bizarre family that ever existed. 'After the first few pages something extraordinary happens, and you find yourself lulled by the story's relentless onward push . . . It slips by like a bad dream that leaves you feeling still shaken in the morning. And that is meant as the highest compliment.' Kathryn Hughes, Guardian

      The House of the Eagle