


“Immediately transports the reader to another time and place.” - Publishers Weekly “Downie writes with quiet authority and surprising depth, offering an engaging depiction of an obscure slice of history.” - Kirkus Reviews

Tyler, author of The Herring-Seller's Apprentice This is story-telling of a high order-an immensely enjoyable read.” - L.C. The story is told with Ruth Downie's usual quirky humor and a nod towards the present day health services-the sly references to targets and quotas are very much part of the fun of the book. You feel that you are there in the cramped hospitals of the Roman forts or out in the bleak northern countryside watching the flickering flames of the Samain festival. “Excellent-a well-constructed murder mystery that skillfully brings Roman Britain to life.

Look out, Lindsey Davis!” - Michael Jecks, author of the Knights Templar series A crime writer to watch with a matchless style. Ruth Downie shows why she's considered the best of the Roman mystery writers. “It makes book reviewing easy when you realize you are reading for pleasure! A superb evocation of the harsh life of Romans and rebels in the bandit-country of England while building Hadrian's Wall. Scott, author of the Rome and Boudica series With a finely wrought plot, a densely woven cast of characters and plenty of action, this is a book to savor to the last sentence.” - M.C. Ruso is a complex, engaging, utterly human medic, straddling the line between occupiers and occupied in the divided lands of Britannia with panache and good-humoured compassion. “Ruth Downie ranks among the very best of today's generation of Roman writers by far and away the most obvious inheritor of Rosemary Sutcliff's honoured mantle. The Ruso series might not be as well known as, say, Lindsey Davis' longer-running Marcus Didius Falsco series, but it's just as entertaining.” - Booklist Let's hear it for those Romans.” - Kirkus Reviews, starred review Highly recommended.” - Library Journal, starred review “Shipwrecks, ex-wives, gruesome gladiatorial games, unruly children, family discord, and, of course, mayhem and murder. “Places Downie alongside such established masters of the Roman historical as Steven Saylor and Rosemary Rowe.” - Publishers Weekly, starred review One hell of a toga party.” - Entertainment Weekly “Attention to day-in-the-life period details, judiciously doled-out twists, and dry British humor.
