Top

Funeral Games

On sale

7th August 2014

Price: £10.99

Select a format

Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781405526227

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

‘The Alexander Trilogy contains some of Renault’s finest writing. Lyrical, wise, compelling: the novels are a wonderful imaginative feat’ SARAH WATERS

The heavens say it begins with the death of the King . . .

Alexander the Great, conqueror of an empire stretching from Greece to Egypt to India, is dead at the age of thirty-three. His only direct heirs are two unborn sons, and every long-simmering faction is poised to explode into the vacuum of power. As his wives, distant relative and generals vie for the loyalty of the increasingly undisciplined Macedonian army, with fatal results, Alexander’s fragile empire is torn to pieces – but his legend will endure across worlds he had only imagined.

In the final novel of her stunning trilogy, Mary Renault vividly reimagines the life of Alexander the Great, the charismatic leader whose drive and ambition created a legend.

‘Brilliant and brutal… she has retained her unnerving genius for making the remote past live without diminishing its remoteness and alien glitter’ SUNDAY TIMES

‘Discerning, sure-footed, challenging our values, piquing our curiosity, she leads us through an alien landscape that moves and delights us’ HILARY MANTEL

‘The Alexander Trilogy stands as one of the most important works of fiction in the twentieth century’ ANTONIA SENIOR

Reviews

Renault's skill is in immersing us in their world, drawing us into its strangeness, its violence and beauty . . . a literary conjuring trick . . . so convincing and passionately conjured
The Times
The Alexander Trilogy stands as one of the most important works of fiction in the 20th century . . . it represents the pinnacle of [Renault's] career . . . Renault's skill is in immersing us in their world, drawing us into its strangeness, its violence and beauty. It's a literary conjuring trick like all historical fiction - it can only ever be an approximation of the truth. But in Renault's hands, the trick is so convincing and passionately conjured.
Antonia Senior, The Times