Philip Freeman earned his Ph.D. at Harvard University and has taught at Boston University, Washington University, and Luther College. He currently holds the Fletcher Jones Chair in Humanities at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. He has been a visiting fellow at the American Academy in Rome, the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington D.C., and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He has published over twenty books, ranging from biographies of Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, and Saint Patrick to translations of Cicero and Aristotle. His books have been translated into fifteen languages around the world. Philip lives in Malibu, California.
"Freeman writes beautifully and with picturesque vision when
chronicling Hannibal’s most famous feat."
*Merion West*
"Freeman gives his readers much to consider in learning about a
totally alien world in an easy, uncomplicated lively prose about an
epic tale."
*New York Journal of Books*
Advance Praise for Hannibal
“A thorough account of the career of one of the ancient world’s
most indelible and complex figures. Freeman vividly, almost
cinematically, brings to life the career of Hannibal Barca, the
great but ill-fated Carthaginian general whose tactical and
strategic brilliance is still studied today. A simultaneously
propulsive and nuanced account that hums on the page.”
*Kirkus, Starred Review*
"Roman historians have cast Hannibal Barca as a cruel, uncouth
barbarian, but Philip Freeman’s panoramic
biography Hannibal supplies evidence that the great
Carthaginian military leader was an educated statesman and
diplomat, notable for his devotion to his country, family, and
troops. Hannibal is an epic biography of the military
genius who nearly ended Rome’s imperial expansion."
*Foreword Reviews*
“Freeman offers a highly readable, well-organized military and
personal biography of the Carthaginian general who nearly changed
history, vividly revealing more amazing scenarios in Hannibal’s
life and battles than any writer could concoct in a novel. Freeman
ends with fascinating speculation on how the modern world would
look if Hannibal had won. [A] vivid, fast-moving account.”
*Booklist*
Praise for Philip Freeman’s Julius Caesar and Alexander the
Great:
“Freeman’s cultural and historical knowledge bring the emperor to
life and humanize him in a way no writer before him has succeeded
in doing.”
*Publishers Weekly*
“Here, in vivid and exciting detail, are all the familiar
highlights of Alexander’s career: the battles, the tempestuous
relationships, the dazzling ambitions, the mysterious death in
Babylon. Mr. Freeman’s ambition, he tells us in his introduction,
was ‘to write a biography of Alexander that is first and foremost a
story.’ It is one he splendidly fulfills.”
*The Wall Street Journal*
"The greatest victory of the book, however, is Freeman’s
storytelling. This biography stands out from others written about
Alexander thanks to its smooth flow and interesting narrative. It
is, as Freeman hopes, a history book for those readers who are not
already experts on Alexander or his world.”
*The Saturday Evening Post*
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