Alexander the Great
A Novel
Nikos Kazantzakis author Niki Stavrou translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Ohio University Press
Publishing:18th Nov '25
£15.99
This title is due to be published on 18th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Newly translated, this classic novel is sure to delight readers of all ages as it explores the legendary conqueror’s life, ambitions, and humanity.
Nikos Kazantzakis’s Alexander the Great is a biographical novel about one of antiquity’s greatest political and military leaders. In Kazantzakis’s story, Alexander of Macedonia does not conquer for conquest’s sake; instead, he seeks to spread the light of Hellenism to the known world, unite humanity through Greek ideals and culture, and bring together East and West.
The story begins in Pella, the lavish capital of Macedonia, in the fourth century BCE. A teenager named Stefanos rushes to the royal stadium for a remarkable event that has drawn every male citizen of this capital city: the taming of a wild and uniquely powerful horse named Bucephalus. Relying on raw strength and force, even seasoned generals fail to subdue Bucephalus; but through skill, kindness, and insight, the fifteen-year-old Alexander is able to befriend the beast. Alexander’s symbolic taming of chaos foretells his rise to power and demonstrates the qualities he will carry with him throughout his lifelong campaign of conquest.
Through the eyes of Stefanos, who becomes Alexander’s personal attendant and most trusted companion, Kazantzakis follows the Macedonian army through triumphant campaigns across Persia, Egypt, and India, greatly expanding the boundaries of the ancient Hellenic world. Kazantzakis presents Alexander not only as an ingenious military strategist but also as a reflective human being. Alexander oscillates between the human and the divine but will ultimately be betrayed by the former. Kazantzakis narrates Alexander’s struggles and conquests all the way to Babylon, where he meets his untimely death at just thirty-three years of age.
This iconic novel also explores Alexander’s profound relationship with his mentor, Aristotle, who instills in him a lifelong thirst for knowledge. Alexander the Great offers a compelling blend of history, myth, and philosophy and will appeal to readers fascinated by ancient Greece, epic heroes, and humanity’s timeless quest for the meaning of life.
Dear Mr. Kazantzakis, I received your novel Griechische Passion with the beautiful hand-written inscription, and have read it with sincere emotion. The novel is without doubt a work of high artistic order, formed by a tender and firm hand, and built up with strong dynamic power. I have particularly admired the poetic tact in phrasing the subtle, yet unmistakable allusions to the Christian Passion Play. They give the book its mythical background which is such a vital element in the epic form today. . . . Please accept my best wishes for the future. Most cordially yours, Thomas Mann.
(Thomas Mann, in a letter to Nikos Kazantzakis)I held great admiration and, if you would allow me, a kind of affection for your husband's work. I have not forgotten that on the very day when I regretted receiving a distinction (of the Nobel Prize for Literature) that Kazantzakis deserved a hundred times more, I received from him the most generous of telegrams. . . . With him disappears one of our last great artists. I am among those who feel and will continue to feel the void he has left.
(Albert Camus, in a letter to Eleni Kazantzakis)The great writer made me enter an enchanted universe where man, starlit dust, pursues with the same relentlessness his battle with himself and with God. Whoever begins to read Kazantzakis cannot stop.
(Elie Wiesel, in All Rivers Run to the Sea: MemoISBN: 9780821426616
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
277 pages