Plutarch (46–119) is a classic author whose works are in the public domain.

Plutarch's paired biographies of great Greeks and Romans read like psychological portraits rendered in marble, revealing how ambition, virtue, and fate collide in the lives of history's titans. His parallel structure invites readers to discover universal patterns in human greatness across cultures.

Plutarch's biographical pairs illuminate history through intimate portraiture, revealing how individual character, ambition, and circumstance forge the destinies of empires and remind us that great events often hinge on deeply human choices.

Plutarch's penetrating essays on virtue, vice, and the human condition cut through pretense with the wisdom of a man who lived through empires—these are timeless meditations from someone who understood power, failure, and redemption intimately.
