---
product_id: 7787910
title: "Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel (Egyptian Royals Collection)"
brand: "michelle moran"
price: "KD 8.30"
currency: KWD
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 7
url: https://www.desertcart.com.kw/products/7787910-cleopatras-daughter-a-novel-egyptian-royals-collection
store_origin: KW
region: Kuwait
---

# Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel (Egyptian Royals Collection)

**Brand:** michelle moran
**Price:** KD 8.30
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel (Egyptian Royals Collection) by michelle moran
- **How much does it cost?** KD 8.30 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.com.kw](https://www.desertcart.com.kw/products/7787910-cleopatras-daughter-a-novel-egyptian-royals-collection)

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- michelle moran enthusiasts

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## Description

Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel (Egyptian Royals Collection)

## Images

![Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel (Egyptian Royals Collection) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/816+Ay1wCZL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Coming of Age in Imperial Rome
  

*by M***R on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 31, 2019*

This reviewer will admit to having studied Latin (and consequently old Rome) for five years between high school and college. During that time I found Roman history interesting. Period. But Michelle Moran picks up the story in the years after Julius Caesar and Marc Antony. Told from the point of view of Kleopatra Selene, we are privy to the lives of she and her twin, Alexander Helios, from their tenth year through their fifteenth birthdays.The twins are the only remaining offspring of Marc Antony and Kleopatra VII of Egypt. Their two brothers, Antyllus and Caesarion, have been killed by Octavian of Rome as they are threats to the throne. Along with their younger brother Ptolemy, the three are taken aboard one of their mother’s ships and brought to Rome. Unfortunately, young Ptolemy does not survive the trip. Brought to live in the house of Octavia, sister of Octavian and former wife of Marc Antony, they are treated respectfully although they are paraded through the streets as part of Octavian’s Triumphal parade.The twins lead an interesting life in Rome and the reader is afforded a look at the various class structure of the Roman empire. Vivid and detailed descriptions of historical places that I’d only read about seemed to jump off the pages for me, bringing old Rome alive. The characters that once seemed so noble in my Latin classes now became human and it was easy to see that their nobility was nothing more than a mask. Beneath their air of civility lurked their barbarism. Throughout the story we are reminded that once the twins reach their fifteenth birthday they run the very real risk of being killed as they would become even more of a threat to Octavian.Coming of age in Octavian’s Rome, Selene describes in detail the working of the Senate and the court as well as the personal ambitions of members of the emperor’s family. And their ambitions are as varied as are their positions. Woven throughout the story is a plot of intrigue and danger that encompasses all of Imperial Rome and its citizens. Throughout the story Selene and Alexander must manage to stay alive and carry on the legacy of Egyptian royalty as best they can. It is her hope that by making herself useful to Octavian that he will one day allow her to return to Egypt and so she uses her artistic abilities to study under the architect Vitruvius.I was engrossed from the first page of this meticulously researched and detailed story. By page two I was immersed in the sacking of Alexandria by Octavian and his Roman armies. On page three, Selene captured my heart. She is intelligent, precocious, and pretty. When her mother takes her own life, it is Selene who becomes the nurturer for her two brothers. Like her mother, Selene is a strong, independent young woman who lives an entire lifetime between her tenth and her fifteenth birthdays.Cleopatra’s Daughter is the third book by author Michelle Moran that I’ve read and I have yet to be disappointed. It is clear to this former Latin student that Ms. Moran has put the time and effort into her writing that continue to earn her five stars from this reader. I look forward to her other two books.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    A Novel Worthy of Cleopatra's Heirs
  

*by A***R on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 4, 2018*

What a wonderful delight it was to discover this novel. In the opening scenes I was struck by what a different type of book I was reading. Cleopatra as proud, not wanton. Her attempted seduction of Agrippa was from desperation, not licentiousness. She loved Antony. And Antony... I was telling myself that it was stupid to cry so early in a book. I don't think I was even out of the first chapter. But so many authors focus solely on his debauchery. Yet Moran, in a few brief paragraphs, wrote a man too human to live. Who loved his drink, his game, his wife and his children. She wrote Antony exactly as I had always imagined him. A real mensch.I could have cheered at the details inserted into the book, such as the fact that Cleopatra had only had two husbands, and was in no way the harlot who has come down to us through a 2000 year old smear campaign. I truly appreciated Moran's point that she was 'more chaste' than a Roman woman, who did not marry for love, but married far more often. And it was such a great detail to see how Alexander was a gifted horse rider and gambler, in echoes of his father.So many authors kill off their character for effect, and never feel the need to dwell on the deaths after they've served their purpose. But with 'Cleopatra's Daughter,' I felt Antony and Cleopatra as alive in the later chapters as in the earlier, because they were carried in the hearts of their children. That is one of the things most admirable about this book.Selene said a line that struck to my core and reverberated through the entire book: 'I don't think unhappiness is fated.' She said this to her brother, and I thought it was such a powerful message. Terrible things happen to Moran's characters, but the author always shows their will to persevere. It is both a noble and a very human trait. Not since Lord Bulwer-Lytton's 'Last Days of Pompeii,' have I cared so much about a historical novel and the fate of its protagonists.Finally, the fate of Selene's pink pearls made me cry all over again.A wonderful, wonderful book. So looking forward to now devouring 'Nefertiti' and 'The Heretic Queen.'

### ⭐⭐ 







  
  
    bad read
  

*by C***E on Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on April 8, 2016*

Very disappointing read for me.It was badly written. I did not understand what is the point of inventing the Red Eagle  since he didn't achieve anything (adding a twist of mystery? why? the story has enough intrigue without it). Also, Selene is supposed to have helped design the Pantheon? I know there is such a thing as fictional licence but seriously!There were certain sections which annoyed me and I wish the author would try to understand the Romans or at least Augustus better before providing her take on situations. For example, she attributed the fact that Princess Selene and Prince Alexander were not made slaves because they were children of a queen and not barbarians like the Gauls. Actually, they were not made slaves for the simple reason that they were ROMAN. Their father was Mark Antony; legitimate children of a Roman would not be made slaves in Rome! Augustus would not have set a bad example by making them slaves.Also, the overwhelming sympathy for slaves from Selene was not very realistic. Selene would have been brought up in Egypt, where slaves were treated a lot worse than Rome. They couldn't even buy back their freedom and making eunuchs of slaves was common practice (something considered barbaric in Rome!) So I am not sure that Selene was this ultra evolved sympathetic modernist portrayed here. I think the author is trying to see too much in Rome through modern eyes.Finally, I wish she would have written more on Selene's life in Mauretania rather than Rome. She accomplished so much there.Overall, very disappointing. I wish the author would stick to fiction and keep history out of her work!!citychiclifestyle.blogspot.com

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*Product available on Desertcart Kuwait*
*Store origin: KW*
*Last updated: 2026-05-13*