The
Nature of Alexander by Mary Renault (ISBN 0-394-73825-X) is not a
historical novel like her bestsellers Firefrom Heaven and The
Persian Boy but rather a biography of Alexander the Great in as far as the story of his life can be told
as such.
During his lifetime Alexander was a legend and after his death the legend only grew to
such an extend that it is very difficult to paint a true portrait of the world
conqueror some 2,500 years afterwards. Whoever writes or talks about Alexander from antiquity onward has
his/her own tainted version for it is utterly impossible to be impartial – the
figure of Alexander is just too
complex for that.
In order to write her two above-mentioned historical novels, Mary Renault made an in-depth study of the authors from
antiquity, the closest we can come to lifetime information. This biography
recounts the Alexander figure as it
transpires through her research and is evidently not the one and only facet of
his personality. Pushing her book aside as unfit for a serious student of Alexander is underrating her personal
approach to the world conqueror. Beyond being a general, a leader of men (and
what a leader!), a king, he is also a man with great visions and far ahead of
his time. His ambitions were not understood by his Macedonian commanders and
soldiers, nor were they accepted by the conquered Persians, Sogdians or
Indians. I share Mary Renault’s viewpoint that the only person who truly
understood Alexander was his lifetime
friend Hephaistion.
The great merit of Mary Renault is that she
underscores this private side of Alexander
and examines his thoughts and considerations as daily events and life in
general unfold. It is one thing to write about the conqueror Alexander and his generalship, but it is
another – and far more challenging – to write about the great man he was, a
genius as the world has never seen since.
No comments:
Post a Comment