Quantity:
Ships from/sold by Better World Books
Who's this?
Seller Rating:
advertisement
Author:  Barry Unsworth
Earn Super Points: Write a Review
Sorry, this selection is currently unavailable.
product image
$26.00
(Save 69%)
Today
$7.97  Free Budget Shipping
EARN 8 RAKUTEN SUPER POINTSWhat's this?
Format: Hardcover
Also Available: Other Formats Choose Format
Condition:  Used-Very Good
In Stock: Usually Ships in 1 to 2 business days
View My Store
Share

Product Details:

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0385501145
ISBN-13: 9780385501149
Sku: 31092683
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 8.5H x 5.75L x 1T
Pages:  352
Age Range:  NA
See more in Literary
promo
 
As the harsh wind holds the Greek fleet trapped in the straits at Aulis, frustration and political impotence turn into a desire for the blood of a young woman--blood that will appease the gods and allow the troops to set sail. High-sounding principles clash with private motives, and dark comedy ensues.
From the Publisher:
“Troy meant one thing only to the men gathered here, as it did to their commanders. Troy was a dream of wealth; and if the wind continued the dream would crumble.”

As the harsh wind holds the Greek fleet trapped in the straits at Aulis, frustration and political impotence turn into a desire for the blood of a young and innocent woman – blood that will appease the gods and allow the troops to set sail. And when Iphigeneia, Agamemnon’s beloved daughter, is brought to the coast under false pretences, and when a knife is fashioned out of the finest and most precious of materials, it looks as if the ships will soon be on their way. But can a father really go to these lengths to secure political victory, and can a daughter willingly give up her life for the worldly ambitions of her father?

Throwing off the heroic values we expect of them, Barry Unsworth’s mythic characters embrace the political ethos of the twenty-first century and speak in words we recognize as our own. The blowhard Odysseus warns the men to not “marginalize” Agamemnon and to “strike while the bronze is hot.” High-sounding principles clash with private motives, and dark comedy ensues. Here is a novel that stands the world on its head.With the Greek fleet trapped in the straits of Aulis by storms, Iphigeneia, the innocent young daughter of Agamemnon, is brought to the coast under false pretenses in order to sacrifice her to appease the gods and allow the ships to continue their voyage to Troy, in a colorful historical novel about the Trojan War.
Annotation:
Barry Unsworth's historical novel takes place during the Trojan War, while the Greek ships are trapped at Aulis by unfavorable winds. Wanting to placate the gods and turn the winds, the sailors wish to sacrifice Agamemnon's daughter, Iphigeneia. Unsworth investigates the mix of emotions experienced by those involved, who include not only father and daughter but Odysseus and other familiar figures from the heroic era of Greek literature.
Author Bio
Barry Unsworth
Barry Unsworth's novel PASCALI'S ISLAND was made into a film, and SACRED HUNGER won the Booker Prize. A former teacher who has traveled extensively throughout the world--living for many years in Finland, and in his later years mainly in Umbria--he is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Praise

Literary Review
"In recasting a tale told in Euripides' IPHEGNIA AT AULIS, involving characters made famous by Homer's ILIAD, Barry Unsworth presumably hopes to square up to these literary forebears, spin a good yarn, and persuade modern readers that his story carries some relevance to their lives today. He succeeds in all of these aims, to a limited extent....His story mirrors, to good effect, the plot movement of the ILIAD, from long inaction to extreme violence, and the characters...are rounded and convincing. Unsworth writes beautiful sentences in the Apollonian style." - Thomas Hodgkinson October 2002

New York Times Book Review
"The heart of the book...lies in Unsworth's account of Sisipyla, Iphigenia's slave....In her chapters..., we are reminded of Unsworth's sheer storytelling power, his gift for precise and evocative language, his deep feeling for the people he is creating....In the end..., it is neither on its fidelity to its classical predecessors nor on its ideas about history and storytelling that Unsworth's novel must succeed or fail--precisely because it is a novel....[F]or all this novel's accomplishments, I cannot imagine anyone shedding a tear over its end. Unsworth's Iphigenia approaches her sacrificial altar more as a literary construct than as a real girl. This leaves THE SONGS OF THE KINGS more admirable for its ideas than its emotional range, more insightful in its view of the novel's imaginative power than imaginatively powerful as a novel in its own right." - Neil Gordon 03/30/2003

New Yorker
"[A] bold, modern tale with cynical riffs on the themes of duty and power, truth and fiction." 06/09/2003

Advertisement Bottom
BloomReach Content