Series: Book 1 in the Novels series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Historical, Lang:en
Summary
Starred Review. George (_Mary, Called Magdalene_)
depicts with bravado, grace and eloquence the grand spectacle
surrounding Helen of Troy. The author's research into
Mycenaean culture, coupled with Trojan War mythology's
larger-than-life heroes, enliven a bold story pulsing with
romance and sacrifice, omens and battles. Helen's noble
Spartan parents try to defy the fates when a seer foretells
the tragedy Helen and her legendary beauty will cause, but,
as the myth of Helen demonstrates, destiny cannot be altered.
Helen's years of seclusion in Sparta lead to a frigid
marriage to Menelaus before she connects with Paris, the
Trojan prince with whom she forges an inextricable bond.
Barely into her 20s, Helen escapes with Paris to Troy, but
finds the Trojan royals welcome her with less than open arms.
The mythic war, which, in less capable hands, might be
over-romanticized, is portrayed with an enthusiasm that rings
true to the period without verging on stagy—no small
feat when dealing with such a sweeping conflict. George's
extraordinary storytelling abilities shine in her portrayal
of Helen as both a conflicted woman who abandoned her
homeland and child for true love, and as a legendary figure
whose beauty and personal choices had epic consequences.
(On sale Aug. 7)
When Helen of Sparta is seven years old, the sibyl at
Delphi prophesies she will start a war in which many Greeks
will die. King Tyndareus and Queen Leda, stricken with panic,
keep their younger daughter in seclusion, discouraging rumors
that Zeus is her real father. To marry her off quickly, they
spread word that Helen is the most beautiful woman in the
world. But because Helen fails to invoke Aphrodite when
choosing a husband, her marriage to Menelaus of Mycenae is
passionless. The fickle goddess finally hears Helen's pleas,
yet Aphrodite's powers affect only Paris, a visiting Trojan
prince, with whom Helen immediately falls in love. When the
pair elopes one night to Paris' affluent homeland, it
precipitates a war destined to last 20 years, one that
Menelaus' restless and greedy brother, Agamemnon, has been
itching to fight. Only George, reigning queen of the epic
fictional biography, could render Helen's story with all the
emotion, grandeur, and tragedy it deserves. Her characters
are precisely crafted, and the lovely Helen, clear-eyed and
intelligent, is a sympathetic narrator. Despite the novel's
length, the pages practically turn themselves. An absorbing
retelling of the classic Trojan War myth, and a sobering look
at the utter futility of trying to change one's fate.
Sarah Johnson
From Publishers Weekly
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