Xerxes by Jacob Abbott
Let me tell you about 'Xerxes' by Jacob Abbott—it’s a gem for anyone who loves history but hates feeling like they’re in a lecture hall. This book, written way back in the 1800s, is old but shockingly fresh. Abbott tells the story of Xerxes I, the Persian king made famous (or infamous) by the Battle of Thermopylae and his doomed war against the Greeks. I came for the battles, but I stayed for the weird, human moments—like when this absolute monarch ordered his men to whip the sea with chains because it “insulted” him by tearing apart his bridge. Yes, that happened.
The Story
The plot is wild. Xerxes takes over an empire stretching from India to Egypt. But he’s consumed by revenge (and his dad’s trauma from the first Persian-Greek war). So he builds a massive army, assembles ships from every corner of his land, and heads to Greece. Along the way, he cuts a canal, builds boat-bridges, faces a freak storm, and spars with weird advice from terrified advisors. The climax? The famous fights—Thermopylae, Salamis—where his thousands of men can’t beat a smaller, smarter force. In the end, Xerxes flees back to Persia, humbled, and his empire never recovers. Abbott stitches this together like a Netflix miniseries: betrayals, mistaken alliances, a ghost story or two, and one very emotional king.
Why You Should Read It
What I loved most is how full of personality Xenxes feels. He’s arrogant, ambitious, and emotionally volatile—Abbott shows him as a man crushed by the weight of his own expectations. There’s also this bittersweet theme: even absolute power couldn’t protect Xerxes from human error. (The part where he watches his army starve because supply lines failed? Chilling.) You get the entire social world of court intrigue, spy craft, and the shady deals that undercut his campaigns. No stuffy timelines here—just pure storytelling. I was marking pages like index sticky notes to share with friends.
Final Verdict
If you love ancient history, military epics, or character studies, you’ll eat this up. Warning: Abbott’s style sometimes feels 19th-century (calling things “the moderns” instead of “we”), but it actually adds charm. If theater-of-mind battle sequences and Greek soap operas sound fun, trust me—this book will make you feel like you’re sitting in Xerxes’s war tent, smelling the sweat and cheap wine. Perfect for fans of Gates of Fire or anyone curious why a sea deserves to be spanked.
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William Davis
8 months agoThe research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.
Emily Williams
7 months agoI started reading this with a critical mind, it addresses the common misconceptions in a very professional manner. I'm glad I chose this over the other alternatives.
Paul Taylor
3 months agoThe balance between academic rigor and readability is perfect.