http://www.amazon.com/Shahnameh-Classic ... F8&s=books
This contains one of the versions of the Persian Alexander Romance. I've read that segment and is wonderful.

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Aha! Thanks for this link. I've been wondering if I'd be able to get any of the Persian stuff for a while (although I confess I was hardly "searching") ... this could do the trick!rjones2818 wrote:The deluxe paperback edition is now available from Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Shahnameh-Classic ... F8&s=books
This contains one of the versions of the Persian Alexander Romance. I've read that segment and is wonderful.
Truly a “Romance” …The son rose over the mountains and the land glowed like a golden lamp. Dara mustered the ranks of his army, which covered the earth like a pitch-black cloak. He led his men, more numerous than blades of grass, across the Euphrates, and when Sekander heard of their approach, he had the war drums sounded and his troops prepared. The two hosts could not be counted, but in all the world there was only one Sekander. Dust loomed over the scene like a mountain, and the whole plain seemed a seething sea of weapons and warriors, of armor and Indian daggers, of war horses and barding. On each side the troops were drawn up, and the sun flashed on their swords. In the vanguard were the war elephants, and behind them the cavalry, men who had renounced all love of life. The very air seemed to cry out for blood, the land to groan with the warrior’s battle cries, the mountains to shake with the din of trumpets and Indian chimes. The horses’ neighing and the combatants’ shouts, the crashing of heavy maces on armor, all seemed to transform the plain to a mountain of warfare, and the air turned black with dust. For seven days the battle raged, and on the eighth a dust storm obscured the sun and blew against the blinded Persians, who fled from the battlefield. Sekandar’s men pursued them – the one host full of sorrow, the other of joy – back to the banks of the Euphrates, where innumerable Persians were killed. At first the Greek troops turned back from the river, but Sekandar ordered them across, and they entered the abandoned Persian camp in triumph.