Xerxes by Jacob Abbott

(8 User reviews)   2169
By William Wilson Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - The High Shelf
Abbott, Jacob, 1803-1879 Abbott, Jacob, 1803-1879
English
Hey, have you ever wondered about the guy who tried to conquer Greece and ended up watching his navy get wrecked by a few hundred ships? I just finished 'Xerxes' by Jacob Abbott, and it's a wild ride. Forget the dry history you slept through in school. This book reads like a character study of a man who had everything—absolute power, insane wealth, an empire stretching from India to Egypt—and still managed to botch the biggest military campaign of his life. The central mystery isn't really what happened at Thermopylae or Salamis; we know the Greeks won. The real question Abbott explores is: what kind of person builds a bridge of boats across a sea just because he can, then loses it all to people he considered barbarians? It's a story about the incredible gap between ambition and reality, and how pride can make even the most powerful man look foolish. If you like stories about epic failures with massive consequences, you'll get hooked on this one.
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Jacob Abbott's Xerxes isn't your typical, dusty biography. Written in the 1800s, it has an old-fashioned charm, but it moves with the pace of a good story. Abbott takes us right into the heart of the Persian Empire at its peak, introducing us to a king who inherited the world and wanted more.

The Story

The book follows Xerxes from his rise to the Persian throne. He's not a self-made man; he's born into unbelievable luxury and power. His big idea? Finish what his father started and conquer Greece. Abbott walks us through the insane preparations: amassing a million-man army, building those famous boat-bridges across the Hellespont, and cutting a canal through a mountain for his fleet. We see the campaign unfold—the stand at Thermopylae, the burning of Athens—and then the stunning reversal. The heart of the story is the naval battle at Salamis, where the outnumbered Greek fleet outsmarts and demolishes the Persians. The book doesn't end there, though. It follows Xerxes home, a defeated man, and shows how this colossal failure unraveled his confidence and his reign.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book stick with you is how human Xerxes feels. Abbott doesn't paint him as a cartoon villain. He's a guy drunk on power, surrounded by yes-men, who believes his own hype. You almost feel sorry for him as his grand plan crumbles. It's a timeless lesson in hubris. Reading about his over-the-top preparations—punishing the sea with whips for destroying his bridge!—you see a man who confused sheer scale with good strategy. The contrast with the scrappy, determined Greeks is what makes the history so compelling. Abbott makes you feel the scale of the mistake.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect book for anyone who finds big historical figures fascinating, especially when they stumble. It's great for readers who enjoy narrative history but might be intimidated by heavy academic tones. If you liked Gates of Fire or movies like 300 and want to know more about the 'bad guy' from the Persian perspective, start here. Fair warning: the language is from the 19th century, so it has a formal rhythm, but that adds to its classic feel. It's a short, insightful look at one of history's most dramatic downfalls.



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Thomas Taylor
9 months ago

The peer-reviewed feel of this content gives me great confidence.

Jessica Wilson
2 years ago

Comparing this to other titles in the same genre, the language used is precise without being overly academic or confusing. A solid investment for anyone's personal development.

Patricia Young
1 year ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

Betty Allen
1 year ago

After finishing this book, it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. A true masterpiece.

Dorothy Ramirez
1 year ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Absolutely essential reading.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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