From Publishers Weekly
The pseudonymous Apostolou weighs in with the second book (after A Murder in Macedon, 1997) in her series featuring the brother-and-sister sleuthing team of Miriam and Simeon Bartimaeus, two Israelite friends of Alexander the Great. It seems that while Alexander's army may have decimated Thebes, the Thebans might have the last word. While awaiting Alexander's arrival, his victorious troops are told that their sovereign's party has perished in an ambush?false information that must have been planted by one of Alexander's own officers. When Alexander arrives in Thebes and learns that two of his favorite officers have been killed, the hunt for the spy/murderer is just the beginning of the troubles for him and the Bartimaeus siblings (whom Alexander has known since his days of learning at the feet of Aristotle). Miriam and Simeon also have to figure out how to get the crown of Oedipus into their chief's hands, guarded as it is by priestesses, fire and snakes. As Macedonian soldiers continue to die, especially those guarding Oedipus's temple, their task becomes more urgent. Some wonder if the ghost of the Theban king is avenging his people, but the ever logical Miriam believes in a less fanciful explanation for all the hauntings, riddles and conundrums. Apostolou's plot is complex to a fault, and she offers so much information about the times that very little of it comes to life or lodges in the reader's imagination. Alexander's greatness never materializes on the page, and Miriam, while she may have been one of Aristotle's star pupils, seems capable only of deductions that strain credibility.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Has Alexander of Macedon been killed with his army in Thessaly even before he can become Alexander the Great? No, he's alive and in fighting trim. But the rumors of his defeat and death are so threatening to his dreams of unifying Greece against the growing Persian enemy that it's doubly important his siege of Thebes be successful. Even when the city of the fabled King Oedipus obligingly falls to the conqueror, Alexanders scorched-earth victory is poisoned by his failure to secure the Iron Crown of Oedipus, a relic jealously guarded by the keepers of a local shrine, and by the death of his trusted officer Memnon, who unaccountably plunged to his death from a tower window dressed in full battle gear. It's murder, of course, and only the first of several acts in a bloody chapter that will feature the limping ghost of Thebes' most famous citizen, provide endless grist for Alexander's twin Israelite clerks Miriam and Simeon Bartimaeus (A Murder in Macedon, 1997), and have even the most tenderhearted readers forgetting about the burning of Thebes. The only downside for non-Theban partisans is that the homicidal toll grows so great (to an even dozen, by our count) that there's not much room for incidents that don't involve the discovery of more corpses. Pseudonymous Apostolou provides painless historical sidelights while her heroine continues to make up in detective acumen what she lacks in personality. --
Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.