After leaving Apion in a very, very dark place at the end of Strategos:
Born in the Borderlands, I often wondered not where I would take him next, but
where I would find him when I returned to the story to write this second volume.
The cliff-hanger ending to the first volume was a tempting place to pick up
again, but I quickly realised that Apion's story demanded something
different.
Indeed, having read David Gemmell's classic 'Midnight Falcon', I marvelled
at how the author had effortlessly stepped several years ahead from where the
previous volume, 'Sword in the Storm', left off. Much had happened in the
intervening years. Richly painted and seemingly iron-willed characters had been
demoted to mere background figures. The world had changed. But had the author
made that choice, or had Connovar and Bane chosen for him?
I knew that Apion had to be closer to the tumultuous event around which the
trilogy pivots: Manzikert. When, on the first day of my research into this
period, I saw the announcement that Michael Attaleiates' History - an eyewitness
account of Manzikert and the campaigns of the preceding years - had been
translated into English, I sensed the hand of fate on my shoulder. I devoured
Attaleiates' History in days, reading of the rise of an emperor who many thought
could restore Byzantium to greatness, and of his perilous campaigns into Seljuk
Syria. So it was, then, that Apion's destiny was to become entwined in this
brutal and treacherous period . . . "
More about the book: http://www.gordondoherty.co.uk/writeblog/strategosriseofthegoldenheart
Future Fans of Gordon's books, or those interested in the history of the Britons, the Rigante, The Macedonians or the Trojans might also be interested in these posts on this blog:
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