Total War Rome: The Sword of Attila

THE SWORD OF ATTILA

A novel of war and ADVENTURE set in the dying days of the Roman Empire

'A hugely entertaining novel, thoroughly researched and vividly characterised' Historia.

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'I come to you not with an offer of concessions, but with an offer of war. It may not be this year, or next year, but it will be soon, at a place of your choosing.'

AD 439:  The Roman Empire is on the brink of collapse.  With terrifying speed a Vandal army has swept through the Roman provinces of Spain and North Africa, conquering Carthage and threatening Roman control of the Mediterranean.  But a far greater threat lies to the east, a barbarian force born in the harsh steppelands of central Asia, warriors of unparalleled savagery who will sweep all before them in their thirst for conquest - the army of Attila the Hun.

For a small group of Roman soldiers and a mysterious British monk, the only defence is to rise above the corruption and weakness of the Roman emperors and hark back to the glory days of the army centuries before, to find strength in history.  Led by Flavius, a young tribune, and his trusty centurion Macrobius, they fight a last-ditch battle against the Vandals in North Africa before falling back to Rome, where they regroup and prepare for the onslaught to come.

Flavius learns that the British monk who had fled with them from Carthage is more than he seems, and he is drawn into a shady world of intelligence and intrigue under the aegis of Flavius’ uncle Aetius, commander-in-chief of the Roman armies in the west, the man who alone has the power to rally Rome and her allies and save the western empire from annihilation.

Aetius is desperate to buy time until his army is strong enough to confront the Huns on the field of battle, and meanwhile will do anything to undermine their strength. Together they devise a plan of astonishing audacity that will take Flavius and Macrobius across the frontier and far up the river Danube to the heart of darkness itself, to the stronghold of the most feared warrior-emperor the world has ever known – and into alliance with the emperor’s daughter, a warrior-princess who has sworn vengeance against her father for the death of her mother.

In the showdown to come, in the greatest battle the Romans have ever fought, victory will go to those who can hold high the most potent symbol of war ever wrought by man - the sacred sword of Attila.

Click here for a free preview of the PROLOGUE: witness the birth of the man who would one day meet the army of Rome in the greatest battle the ancient world had ever seen ...

Hun sword, 5th century AD

Hun sword, 5th century AD

From the reviews:

'... mix of intrigue and powerful battle scenes ,,, the novel rings true with the sounds of hand-to-hand combat'  Kirkus Reviews

 ' ... a hugely entertaining novel, thoroughly researched and vividly characterised. Here are people I enjoyed, hailing as they do from all parts of the known world, the fictional, the semi-fictional and the factual figures all complementing each other perfectly. From the bloody retreat from Carthage through to the final pitched battle, I was glued to the pages of this book. The locations are painted beautifully and the novel moves along with such a pace, teaching us about 5th-century warfare but never at the expense of entertainment and fascinating stories.' forwinternights

On my previous Total War novel, DESTROY CARTHAGE:

'Superb scenes of the horrid surprises of war ... the road to that Roman victory is the true reading enjoyment'  Kirkus Reviews

'Simply breathtaking - one of the best historical novels of the year' Upcoming4.me

'Delivers historically accurate fiction by the bucketload ...incredibly thrilling and appropriately violent' segaaddicts

THE SWORD OF ATTILA, the second of my historical novels written as companions to the Sega Total War Rome games,  was first published by Pan Macmillan in the UK and St Martin’s Press in the US. Click on the logos opposite to order these editions from Amazon. See below for a gallery of international editions, in French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Polish and Spanish.

Follow my Facebook page and the blog links below for more about the book, including material on the historical and archaeological background.

Click on the image for the game.

Click on the image for the game.

Gold coin of Valentinian, c. AD 450

Gold coin of Valentinian, c. AD 450

The Sword of Attila: blogs

THE SWORD OF ATTILA: international editions

Click on the covers to go to Amazon or the publishers:

Cover artwork on this page by Larry Rostant for the Pan Macmillan editions of David Gibbins' novel The Sword of Attila (2015).