I, Claudius
Claudius • Book 1
by Robert Graves
Narrated by Nelson Runger
Why Listen to This Audiobook?
Claudius played the fool for decades to survive Rome's most murderous dynasty — and his confession is wickedly entertaining.
- Great if you want: palace intrigue, poisonings, and unreliable-narrator storytelling
- Listening experience: dense and cerebral — rewards patience across its nearly 17 hours
- Narration: Runger captures Claudius's dry, sardonic voice with understated precision
- Skip if: tangled Roman family trees make you tune out
About This Audiobook
The Roman Emperor Claudius, dismissed his entire life as a stammering fool, narrates his own autobiography from the margins of history — surviving the murderous intrigues of Augustus, Tiberius, and Caligula precisely because no one considered him worth killing. Robert Graves's 1934 novel is one of the towering achievements of historical fiction: intimate, wry, and saturated with the specific texture of Roman political life, populated by monsters and saints rendered with equal vividness.
Nelson Runger narrates with a voice well-suited to the character's particular mix of self-deprecation and hidden intelligence. Claudius is a man who has learned to perform weakness, and Runger finds the gap between the performance and the sharp mind beneath it. At just under 17 hours, this is a substantial listen, but Graves's prose moves with enough narrative purpose to sustain the length. Audie Award-winning for Audio Drama, this is a benchmark production of a benchmark novel.