Author:Douglas Jackson

Perfect for fans of Simon Scarrow and Ben Kane, this formidable and compelling historical thriller from bestselling author Douglas Jackson will have you absolutely gripped...
"Spectacular and satisfying...thrilling and dramatic...Roman historical fiction at its very best" -- SUNDAY EXPRESS
"Douglas Jackson is one of the finest writers about today...this series is a glorious achievement" -- FOR WINTER NIGHTS
"Rightly hailed as one of the best historical novelists writing today" -- DAILY EXPRESS
"I was devastated to finish this novel and look forward to many more from the pen of Douglas Jackson" -- ***** Reader review
"Superb in every way" -- ***** Reader review
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IN THE FAR NORTH, GAIUS VALERIUS VERRENS' DESTINY AWAITS...
AD 80: Gaius Valerius Verrens is back where he belongs, at the head of a legion. But this is no ordinary legion. His command is the 'unlucky' Ninth, tainted by four decades of ill fortune and poor leadership. A unit regarded as expendable by his superior, Gnaeus Julius Agricola...
Yet all that can be swept aside by a single moment of glory, and the invasion of the north of the province provides the perfect opportunity. Valerius leads his men to a devastating victory against the Brigantes, infuriating Agricola... Soon, even greater honours beckon with the death of Emperor Vespasian and the succession of Valerius's friend, Titus.
All Valerius can do is forget the great prizes on offer, concentrate on defeating the savage tribes who lie in the path of the Ninth, and ignore Agricola's intrigues.
But watching his every move is another enemy - and this one is the most formidable enemy he has ever faced...
Hammer of Rome is the last of the Gaius Valerius Verrens novels. Have you read the other eight?
Spectacular and satisfying . . . thrilling and dramatic . . . Roman historical fiction at its very best.
—— SUNDAY EXPRESSA wonderful novel . . . the battle scenes are as thrilling as ever . . . Douglas Jackson is one of the finest writers about today, irrespective of genre. This series is a glorious achievement and so too is the book that completes it’
—— FOR WINTER NIGHTSMulligan’s prose…delivers a strong human story with impressive skill
—— Max Davidson , Mail on SundayImaginative and challenging… Train Man is his [Mulligan’s] first foray into adult fiction… Carefully crafted and with an undertow of melancholy, Train Man is reminiscent of Nick Hornby’s high-concept scenarios and deceptively light touch with human tragedy
—— Suzi Feay , GuardianBeautifully written… [and] at times even made me laugh out loud
—— Institute of Engineering and TechnologyRaw, fast, improvisatory, unfettered. It’s addictive high-wire writing in which he unflinchingly reveals everything about himself
—— Shortlist[Some Rain Must Fall] is Knausgaard at his best… It’s a rare novelist who writes about student bars and the Happy Mondays at the same time as yearning for spiritual salvation
—— Max Liu , IndependentPart of Knausgaard’s appeal is believability: his books may be called novels but we read them as memoirs. The meticulous detail seems to guarantee their authenticity… Childhood, sex, love, art, work and death are there too, writ small from his own perspective, but compellingly observed
—— Blake Morrison , GuardianReverberates with life’s core questions… In its depiction of the torment of writer’s block and a young adult’s struggle to construct a sense of self, both on and off the page, it is brilliant
—— Anita Sethi , Mail on SundayCourageous, haunting, and beautiful-with EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED, Luiza Sauma takes us on a breathtaking voyage through both the farthest reaches of space and the innermost depths of the human soul
—— Peng Shepherd, author of 'The Book of M'Tinged with melancholy and yearning, this novel is wry and frequently beautiful, and its culmination is surprising and deeply moving
—— GuardianWhat Sauma captures so excellently is the low level anxiety that hums through everyday life
—— TelegraphHer writing is beautiful
—— Rachel Seiffert, author of Dark Room and A Boy in WinterWeird, wonderful and beautifully written
—— Daily MailSauma has the horrors of the workplace nailed with satirical precision
—— Sunday Times CultureAbsorbing and ambitious. Filled with sharp observations about the way in which we live now, Everything You Ever Wanted is both an acute satire of our social-media dominated times, and a haunting examination of depression and anxiety rendered in diamond sharp prose with barely a wasted word. . . It deserves to be on every prize longlist this year
—— iFor fans of Black Mirror
—— ElleMillennial angst meets sci-fi
—— StylistSublime
—— Otegha Uwagba, author of 'The Little Black Book'An arresting debut about memory and trauma. In this respect and others, it resembles Julian Barnes's Man Booker-winner, The Sense of an Ending.
—— Daily Telegraph on 'Flesh and Bone and Water'Luiza Sauma's debut novel is that rare thing: a completely absorbing, brilliantly-designed, literary work.
—— Anita Shreve on 'Flesh and Bone and Water'Her writing is beautiful. I am sure I'll see her name on the spine of many a novel to come
—— Rachel Seiffert, author of the Booker-shortlisted 'The Dark Room'Rebellious and subversive... Williams excels at visceral descriptions of bodies and food alike
—— Mail on SundayA bold and fresh story about food, friendship and feminism...compelling reading.
—— iBold, wild and witty
—— The Sunday ExpressA small utopia celebrating the intoxications of female friendship and standing as a private bulwark against patriarchy
—— TIME MagazineCoe can make you smile, sigh, laugh; he has abundant sympathy for his characters
—— ScotsmanThis book is sublimely good. State of the (Brexit) nation novel to end them all, but also funny, tender, generous, so human and intelligent about age and love as well as politics
—— India KnightNation, published in 2008 (this year's award catchment runs from August 2008-September 2009), is an extraordinarily complicated tale about God, tradition and loss. Yet it is told with beautiful simplicity and rollicking readability.
—— Andrew Johnson , The IndependentFunny and profound, Nation is much more than an adventure story, pitting reason against religion and offering an alternative perspective on world history and culture.
—— Time OutAs Pratchett says: "Thinking. This book contains some. Whether you try it at home is up to you." His wit is on every page; his world surpasses ours, his writing is weird and wonderful. No, weirdly wonderful. It is gripping but put the book down to ponder the thoughts inside to unearth a parallel universe. Terry Pratchett is worth more than his idiom; his teachings contain more philosophical thought than I would have ever thought possible.
—— Sian Reilly (aged 13) , Sunday ExpressA brilliant first novel
—— Rose Tremain , Daily MailA slick debut pulled off with brio, Swan Song is glamorous, vivid and sometimes even daring in its intelligence
—— Irish TimesA dazzling read
—— Image magazineGreenberg-Jephcott’s debut is fizzing with energy and ideas…The novel has style and substance in spades.
—— ObserverWith a grounding in history, it is a fascinating read about the deepest secrets of an iconic author.
—— Hello!Intoxicating
—— PrimaSwan Song is utterly divine.It swept me up and I just couldn't put it down ... it is the writing in this debut novel that astounds most of all. It is vivid, addictive and whips up a terrific portrait of a deeply contradictory and complex man, contrasting scenes from his unorthodox childhood with those from the gilded bubble he ended up in that he lanced through his own actions.
—— Victoria SadlerA sumptuous look at the icons of Manhattan's high society scene in the mid-20th century ... An immersive readthat will have you questioning real histories versus the ones we create for ourselves.
—— History Extra