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Medicus: A Novel of the Roman Empire - Community Reviews back

by Ruth Downie
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By Singing Light
By Singing Light rated it 9 years ago
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I’m not actually entirely sure if I liked this book, but it was just what needed for a day when I felt awful and just wanted to lie on the couch and read.
nospin
nospin rated it 11 years ago
I read the Kindle and bought the Audible for this first in the series mystery about a doctor in the Roman army serving in Britain during the Roman occupation. The doctor investigates the murder of a girl found floating in the river and rescues an injured slave girl. The girl, Tillia, naturally contr...
Viking2917's books
Viking2917's books rated it 11 years ago
meh. good enough to finish, but I was skimming by the end. For "historical fiction" there wasn't much history. Set in Roman Britain, there was little history or period detail to latch on to. Ruso is a Roman doctor in the Legion but there wasn't much detail for either medical practice at the time, or...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 11 years ago
bookshelves: one-penny-wonder, historical-fiction, autumn-2011, roman-civilisation, britain-england, mystery-thriller, medical-eew Recommended to ☯Bettie☯ by: Wanda Read from September 25 to October 07, 2011 Someone had washed the mud off the body, but as Gaius Petreius Ruso unwrapped the sheet...
digitaltempest
digitaltempest rated it 12 years ago
Crossposted at The BiblioSanctum.This story follows military medicus (doctor) Gaius Petreius Ruso who is a Roman man living in Brittania (England). He's escaped to the Brittania to heal from a disaster of a marriage that ended in divorce and the death of his father that left the family with many und...
So Many Books...So Little Time!
So Many Books...So Little Time! rated it 12 years ago
Historical mystery set in Britain during the Roman occupation. Gaius Petreius Ruso is a "medicus" for the 20th regiment, stationed in Deva (now Chester, England). Upon his arrival, he has to deal with the body of a young woman found floating in the river, and then manages to become the accidental ow...
KCPolski
KCPolski rated it 13 years ago
I'm ambivalent about this book. I really liked the characters, which kept me reading. However, I felt the author rambled around too much, making the murders secondary to the story of the medicus and the slave. Although that kept me reading, I wanted more focus on the death investigation.
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 13 years ago
Someone had washed the mud off the body, but as Gaius Petreius Ruso unwrapped the sheet there was still a distinct smell of river.You cannot hunker-down and immerse yourself in this story as it scans modern.Low 3*
Telynor's Library, and then some
Telynor's Library, and then some rated it 14 years ago
A very enjoyable first book in a mystery series set in the Roman Empire. The setting is unusual -- a backwater in Britannia -- and the characters of Ruso and Tilla very appealling. The villain is a bit predictable, but what sets this one apart is the use of humour, which is muchly needed. Four stars...
spocksbro
spocksbro rated it 14 years ago
Reading Medicus I’m put in mind of Colin Cotterill's Siri Paiboun series. In both two men more devoted to their jobs than anything else find themselves reluctantly involved in murder investigations. In both we have a comedic more than tragic writing style that still manages to inject notes of seriou...
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