The great Persian War and its preliminaries : A study of the evidence,…
The Story
Okay, so you know the basic plot: a giant Persian empire rolls toward tiny Greek city-states, eager to crush them. Big battles, brave Spartans, cunning Athenians. But Grundy doesn’t just retell a bedtime story. This book is a full-on investigation into the lead-up and actual wars. He asks tough questions: What caused the first sparks? How did economics, politics, and even geography light the fuse? Through crumbling texts and ancient battlefields, he walks us through Ionian revolts, the crazy Persian logistics for moving armies, and the scrambling Greek alliances. It’s like ‘Band of Brothers’ but with bowmen and triremes—only this time, the stakes are world-changing.
Why You Should Read It
History books often put us in a bubble—everything seemed fated. But Grundy busts that wide open. He shows the messy, human choices: a king’s bad decision, a storm at sea, some bribed officials. Suddenly, history feels alive, like a crime scene full of red flags. Plus, the writing doesn’t milk every word to death. It’s energetic, like a professor you actually want to have coffee with. I loved how he cross-checks scraps of information—Herodotus this, an inscription that, archaeology here—to build a case. It feels less like reading and more like listening to someone obsessed with a puzzle they have almost solved. He respects our intelligence, constantly probing what we think we know about 'barbarians' vs. 'civilized' Greeks. You end up admiring both sides' resilience and despair over their waste.
Final Verdict
This book is for anyone who felt history, especially ancient stuff, was dusty and certain. If you enjoy sharing weird details, if you like arguing about motives, or if you think historical mysteries are cool, you’ll get a kick out of this. Perfect for that friend who loved 'Gates of Fire' but wanted more strategy and less perfume advertising. A warning: it’s scholarly but totally approachable. Read it next to John Keegan’s military histories, and you’ll have a dangerously smart bookshelf. Ground your passion. Step into his detective work, and you won’t look at Marathon the same way again.
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Matthew Martinez
1 year agoAfter a thorough walkthrough of the table of contents, the way it challenges the status quo is both daring and well-supported. I am looking forward to the author's next publication.