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Saturday, July 04, 2009

Department of Book Reports: Julian

In the Spring of AD 380, letters are exchanged between two old men, philosophers, one in Athens and the other in Antioch. They squabble over the price of copying and their respective ages. One complains about the aging process while the other brags about his on-going virility. Most importantly, they discuss the existence of a hidden memoir written by the Emperor Julian, their friend, who was killed in 363 while conducting a military campaign in Parthia, modern day Iran.

Gore Vidal's Julian (Vintage $16.00) was first published in 1964, and remains one of the great historical novels. For me, it bears a rereading often as new ideas and details emerge on each reading. The prose is luminous, and the voices of the three narrators, the philosophers Libanius and Priscus, as well as the Emperor Julian, are lively and engaging.

Julian reigned only two years, but the memory of his time remains. He was the nephew of the Emperor Constantine, who built the new Roman capital of Constantinople, as well as adopting Christianity as the preferred state religion. Following the death of Constantine, Julian, reared as Christian, managed to avoid the family fighting among his cousins for the Imperial throne. He fell in love with philosophy, studied in Athens, which he loved, and secretly renounced his Christianity. Ultimately impressed into Imperial duties, first as Caesar in Gaul, where he warred successfully against the threat of the German tribes on the frontier; and then as acclaimed Emperor. As Emperor, he tried much less successfully to reintroduce Paganism to the Empire, resisted at all times by the various Bishops of the Church. Perhaps thinking himself a new Alexander, Julian went on to march against Rome's great Eastern nemesis, Parthia, where he was killed in a skirmish, maybe by a Roman lance.

Gore Vidal is our best historical novelist. Anyone who read his series on American history know how compelling a storyteller he can be. From Burr, to Lincoln, 1876, Empire and Hollywood, he knows (and is related to many) the major actors of the American past. He is one of the last of those great public intellectuals born in the 1920's that included Norman Mailer and is as well-known for his essays on contemporary affairs as well as his novels. He has also written plays like Visit to a Small Planet, as well as mysteries under the name of Edgar Box. In any event, if you enjoy history and historical novels, do yourself a favor and read Julian. Or re-read it.

Julian, and other novels by Gore Vidal, is available at Jackson Street Books and other fine independent bookstores.

5 comments:

  1. And "Creation."

    That is Vidal's other truly great historical novel.

    The US ones never touched me that deeply, but "Julian" and "Creation" were freaking brilliant.

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  2. May I recommend " United States " , a collection of his essays from the 40's through the 80's ? Brilliant certainly is the word for this man.

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  3. SeattleDan:

    I would buy me oneathem books, 'cept that Mr. Vidal guy? He once't called Willam F. Buckley a "neo crypto nazi". Now is that any way for a person to talk about one of the leading lights of the KKKristian Reich? I mean, one might as well say that Ronald Reagan was a bumbling hack or that George W. Bush was a sociopathic idiot!

    Don't you got some good books, by people like George Will, William Bennet or mAnne Coulter?

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  4. Anonymous9:03 AM

    One of my all time favorite books. I too have to reread it often.

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  5. I endorse the opinion above that "Julian" and "Creation" are masterpieces. "Burr" is also an amazing book.

    Vidal is way past his prime for interview fodder; he's become not much better than a garrulous old geek. But in his prime, nobody could touch him...

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We'll try dumping haloscan and see how it works.