Tibor Fischer goes in search of the ancient novels to discover they aren't
as dusty as the manuscripts on which they're written. Greek and Latin
novelists were writing stories that read like film scripts, thousands of
years before Hollywood. He speaks to leading academics about this
little-known area of fiction, finding that love, happiness and tragedy are
themes that have endured throughout history.

Novelist Tibor Fischer is out to prove that fiction from the first century
AD outdoes Hollywood in sex, cliff-hangers and godlike heroes. He's at the
International Conference on the Ancient Novel in Lisbon-which doesn't sound
much like Tinseltown - where academics met in July to promote the "big
seven": the five Greek and two Latin novels that have survived since
antiquity. Among them is Chariton's Callirhoe, whose walking pin-ups fall in
love on the first page. Fischer talks us through the flagrant plot twists
and wryly explains why they're so familiar: writers have been ripping them
off for 2,000 years.

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