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Persian Fire
- The First World Empire and the Battle for the West
- Narrated by: Andrew Sachs
- Length: 6 hrs and 22 mins
- Abridged Audiobook
- Categories: History, Ancient History
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Summary
Tom Holland's brilliant new book describes the very first "clash of Empires" between East and West. Once again he has found extraordinary parallels between the ancient world and our own. There is no competing popular book describing these events.
Critic reviews
"Excellent." ( Sunday Times)
More from the same
Narrator
What listeners say about Persian Fire
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Performance
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- Mary K McGilloway
- 02-04-16
Why oh why is this abridged?
What would have made Persian Fire better?
I will definitely pay more attention next time, I thought it was unabridged. I am afraid there are too many huge gaps in the narrative and important details lost for me to be happy with this as I wanted a good introduction to this part of history. I have now gone back to the book itself. A great shame as Andrew Sachs is a perfect narrator.
8 people found this helpful
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- Raal Harris
- 16-08-16
About the Greeks basically
What would have made Persian Fire better?
Some new insights. There isnt much more to go on it would seem beyond Herodotus it seems but at the very least some interesting theories would have been nice.
What was most disappointing about Tom Holland’s story?
I didn't think I knew anything about the Persians but there was nothing new to me here. Its basically a retelling of the same old stories. The story ends abruptly after the second invasion.
What didn’t you like about Andrew Sachs’s performance?
A lot of irritating mispronunciations
What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment?
Disappointment, I thought I'd learn something new about the Persians. I didn't.
Any additional comments?
This is not a book about the Persians, it dwells to a much greater extent on the Greeks and on stories any one having shown an interest in the period is probably well aware of. Grab the Dan Carlin free podcast on the subject it is much more interesting, informative and thought provoking.
2 people found this helpful
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- Brian
- 26-05-16
Better than fiction
Holland's rip-roaring book is brilliantly bought to life by Sachs - if you knew a bit about Thermopylae but not the context around it, this is a great book. The relevance to contemporary conflict is covered at the beginning but not two overplayed.
2 people found this helpful
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- T
- 29-04-15
Holland on top form as usual
Any additional comments?
Holland's natural wit and his wonderful narrative history story telling ability makes this a joy to listen to. The best way (in my opinion) to understand the information presented in this well researched and comprehensive book.
2 people found this helpful
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- Mr
- 13-02-19
Good
I’ll be honest, I did zero research about this book and thought it was going to be about the intricacies of the Persian empire, administration, military might (etc.), but instead got a lovely book about Ancient Greece, specifically the battles of marathon, salamis, Plataea, and of course, Thermopylae, along with an in depth look at Athenian democracy.
Whilst being stuff I was already familiar with, the story and performance was entertaining and gripping.
Lovely stuff.
1 person found this helpful
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- Peter Smith
- 27-01-18
Excellent! The title is misleading though.
It is more about Greece than about the Persian Empire and is written from the Greek point of view. Not sure how well that notion stands up today that the Greek success in repelling the invasion by Xerxes is what established the foundation of the west, but it doesn't matter. It's a great tale very well told in this audiobook.
1 person found this helpful
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- J
- 20-09-21
Enthralling
This is one of the best a audiobooks I have ever encountered. Truly an enthralling and enlightening experience.
The narration by Andrew Sachs is absolutely superb. The perfect voice, tone and performance to bring the text to life. Sachs should have narrated all history audio books as he adds so much to the listening experience.
The book is very well written. A superb experience.
Highly recommended. Many history books can lack energy and can even be dull but not Persian Fire. There is an energy to this narrative that enthralls. The perfect encapsulation of the subject matter.
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- Mr
- 28-01-20
Copy and paste from Herodotus
Copy and paste from Herodotus
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- STEVE
- 15-02-19
Disappointing because heavily abridged!
Should not have been abridged at all! This version does little justice to the book or its eminent author. Not recommended for any serious reader.
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- Przemek EU
- 07-01-18
This is not same book as original
This audio book is a shortened version of the original “Persian fire”. It's very disappointing, because lots of bits, sometimes interesting or important are missing or simply make it harder to understand with ommited information.
Also, the frequent mispronunciations of the narrator are very irritating.
The original paper or Kindle versions are much better and definitely worth of reading, but the audio book is very disappointing.