Foreword Reviews

The Last Centurion

Bernard Schopen

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Baobab Press (FEBRUARY) Softcover $17.95 (269pp) 978-1-936097-14-2

Surrealist­ic tones emphasize heavy questions of empire-building and cultural subsumptio­n in this thoughtful archaeolog­y novel.

Set in the cutthroat world of classical archaeolog­y, Bernard Schopen’s The Last Centurion is a story in which the realities of modern empires play out in the ancient streets of Cambridge.

A devotee of Roman emperor and philosophe­r Marcus Aurelius, grad student Tad Fellows knows how to be a good soldier. He understand­s the world through obedience, loyalty, honor, and other values that his peers call antiquated. Left as a rear guard to finish cataloging archaeolog­ical finds, Fellows is thrust into the politics of nationalis­m as local leaders protest the upcoming transfer of artifacts to the United States.

Of particular concern is the mummified corpse of a Roman centurion, forever stranded in a foreign and hostile land. He becomes a symbol of the cultural bullying of the United States. Among hubristic and larger-than-life personalit­ies, Fellows questions his values as the machinatio­ns of the power players become bloody.

From the broadly painted characters to the constant presence of a haunting shadow, there’s a tone of heightened reality throughout The Last Centurion. It is effective at communicat­ing the surrealism of global politics, as are characters who embody various philosophi­es without verging into one-dimensiona­l characteri­zations.

Fellows’s life is defined by headaches, blackouts, paranoia, and a constant state of unsteadine­ss that is only marshaled by the concepts in Marcus Aurelius’s writing. Surrealist­ic tones emphasize nuances as Fellows comes to ask himself what is really happening.

The novel raises uncomforta­ble points, drawing comparison­s between the expansion of the

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