Wednesday, May 10, 2017
CLEOPATRA: A LIFE by Stacy Schiff
Cleopatra
may have been colorful and engaging, but this book is not. I appreciate that historical sources are slim
to none, but I think that the biography of a woman who reigned over a
flourishing Egypt and seduced both Julius Caesar and Mark Antony would be a
little more lively. Instead, I found
this book to be crushingly dull. The
accounts of battles and murders just run together after a while, and it doesn’t
help that the names are confusing and sometimes similar; I had particular
difficulty with Arsinoe (Cleopatra’s sister) and Auletes (her father). On the plus side, I learned a few
things. For example, Mauritania is now
Algeria. Also, the city of Alexandria in
Cleopatra’s day was incredibly beautiful, cultured, and modern compared to
Rome. Cleopatra was very well educated,
spoke nine or more languages, and charmed the Romans with her intellect more so
than her questionable beauty. Unless I
dozed through that section, however, the author never mentions who the three
triumvirs were. (Actually, there was a
first and second triumvirate, but I was mainly interested in the second, made
up of Octavian, Mark Antony, and Lepidus.)
Since so little of Cleopatra’s life is documented, we can’t know if her
missteps were inspired by love and loyalty or if she just miscalculated. Certainly she was not a military
strategist. One particular episode in
the book did not ring true to me. The
author claims that at one point Cleopatra wins over Mark Antony’s continued
affection by crying and staging a hunger strike. Really?
Since when have tears and histrionics ever swayed a man to a woman’s
favor?
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