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David Anthony Durham

    23 mars 1969

    David Anthony Durham est un écrivain qui mêle magistralement événements historiques et éléments de fantasy. Ses œuvres explorent souvent des thèmes complexes tels que l'identité, l'histoire et les conflits culturels, témoignant d'une perspicacité aiguë de la nature humaine. Le style de Durham se caractérise par sa langue riche et sa capacité à entraîner les lecteurs dans des mondes complexes mais toujours captivants. Son écriture offre une perspective unique, reflétant ses propres expériences de vie multiculturelles et diverses.

    Annibale
    The War with the Mein
    The Shadow Prince
    The Other Lands: The Acacia Trilogy, Book Two
    The Sacred Band
    The Longest Night in Egypt
    • The Longest Night in Egypt

      (The Shadow Prince #2)

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      The saga intensifies as Ash and his brave companions embark on a perilous mission to rescue Ra from Apep's grasp, aiming to restore light to a shadowed Egypt. Their journey promises thrilling adventures and challenges as they confront dark forces and seek to reclaim the sun god.

      The Longest Night in Egypt
      4,3
    • The Sacred Band

      • 784pages
      • 28 heures de lecture

      “David Anthony Durham has serious chops. I can’t wait to read whatever he writes next." —George R. R. Martin David Anthony Durham’s acclaimed fantasy saga, the Acacia Trilogy, continues . . . As The Sacred Band begins, Queen Corinn bestrides the world as a result of her mastery of spells from the Book of Elenet. Her younger brother, Dariel, has been sent on a perilous mis­sion to the Other Lands. And her sister, Mena, travels to the far north to face an invasion of the feared race of the Auldek. As their separate trajectories converge, a series of world-shaping, earth-shattering battles will force the surviving children of the Akaran dynasty to confront their fates head on—and right some ancient wrongs once and for all.

      The Sacred Band
      3,8
    • “David Anthony Durham has serious chops. I can’t wait to read whatever he writes next." —George R. R. Martin David Anthony Durham’s gripping Acacia Trilogy continues with an epic novel where loyalties are tested, new worlds are discovered, and battle lines are being drawn. A few years have passed since Queen Corinn has usurped control of the Known World—and she now rules with an iron fist. With plans to expand her empire, she sends her brother, Dariel, on an exploratory mission across the sea to The Other Lands. There, he discovers an alliance of tribes that have no interest in being ruled by Queen Corinn and the Akarans. In fact, Dariel’s arrival ignites a firestorm that once more exposes The Known World to a massive invasion, one unlike anything they have yet faced . . .

      The Other Lands: The Acacia Trilogy, Book Two
      3,7
    • The Shadow Prince

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      "In this middle grade solarpunk novel set in an alternate Egyptian universe, twelve-year-old Ash must compete and survive to become the shadow-and protector-of the prince"-- Provided by publisher

      The Shadow Prince
      3,9
    • The War with the Mein

      • 763pages
      • 27 heures de lecture

      Leodan Akaran, the ruler of an idyllic empire, hides the dark realities of their prosperity from his children, until an assassin from the Mein, a race exiled to a stronghold in the north, strikes him down and frees his children

      The War with the Mein
      3,8
    • Annibale

      Romanzo storico

      • 478pages
      • 17 heures de lecture

      Quando, nel 219 a.C., due emissari di Sagunto si presentarono ai senatori di Roma, per chiedere aiuto al potente alleato di fronte alla minaccia punica, venne loro risposto di non preoccuparsi, perché la potenza di Roma era tale da garantire la sicurezza dei suoi alleati. Sbagliavano, i senatori di Roma. Sbagliavano perché alla guida dei Cartaginesi c'era il giovane Annibale Barca, figlio di Amilcare. Sono passati due anni: il campo di battaglia di Canne, nell'Italia meridionale, è spazzato dal vento, coperto da una distesa di cadaveri. Sono quasi tutti soldati romani. Annibale, di fronte al suo trionfo, pensa che ormai è finita: Cartagine ha vinto. La sua straordinaria impresa, la conquista dell'Italia e la distruzione di Roma, è arrivata all'ultimo atto.

      Annibale
      3,9