Series: Book 1 in the Novels series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Historical, Lang:en
Summary
Bova is best known as a prolific writer of works of
science fiction. Here he tries his hand at supposedly
historical fiction, with interesting, enjoyable, but uneven
results. Lukka, a Hittite warrior, returns to the Hittite
capital city to find it engulfed in civil war, his father
murdered, and his wife and two young sons taken away by
slavers. Along with a small cadre of soldiers under his
command, Lukka launches an epic search for his family, which
leads him to the gates of Troy as it is beseiged by the army
of Agamemnon. Bova then proceeds to an original retelling of
the final stages of the legendary Trojan War. In this
account, Lukka serves as a literary mirror, revealing the
personalities of some well-known characters, with a few
surprising results. Odysseus, predictably, is practical,
crafty, and a natural survivor in treacherous waters.
Achilles is a born killer, but he is shown as short and ugly,
and his death is decidedly unheroic. Helen is, of course, the
babe of all babes, but she is also petty and whiny. Bova
tends to use flowery, descriptive language to excess, but he
knows his Homer. --Jay Freeman Excellent. A thrilling and inventive retelling of the
legend of Troy. --David Hagberg,
New York Times bestselling author of
The Expediter
Completely convincing and emotionally satisfying; the
adventure and warfare are gripping enough to keep me awake to
finish the book in a single night. I hope that when I'm
[Bova's] age, I'll be doing--as he is--the best work of my
career. --Orson Scott Card,
New York Times bestselling author of
Ender's Game
A cast of stars, all seen through the eyes of a Hittite
warrior. With authentic battle scenes and the reality of
siege warfare, THE HITTITE is an adventure you'll want to
undertake. --Barbara D'Amato, Mary Higgins Clark
award-winning author of
Foolproof
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Review