Diner Dictionary
Food & Drink and Travel
App
Eat everywhere and order food in 8 major languages. What is on the menu? How to pronounce the words?...
The Night Life of the Gods
Book
Thorne Smith's rapid-fire dialogue, brilliant sense of the absurd, and literary aplomb put him in...
Island of Gold (Sea and Stone Chronicles)
Book
1454. A noble French falconer. A spirited merchant’s daughter. And a fateful decision that changes...
Historical Romance Adventure
Daughter of Sparta (Daughter of Sparta, #1)
Book
Seventeen-year-old Daphne has spent her entire life honing her body and mind into that of a warrior,...
David McK (3372 KP) rated Shield of Thunder (Troy #2) in Books
Jan 8, 2023
This is also very much a book of discrete parts, starting by focusing largely on Odysseus in the first section and the new characters of Banokles, Kalliades and Piria, before moving onto Troy proper (and recurring characters from the first book) in the second part and then taking a large jump forward in time to the third (and final) part, when war has broken out between the Greek kingdoms of the 'Great Green'.
For my part, I actually found the first section of the book the most enjoyable; the section that concerned itself mostly with Odysseus. While the next section was necessary to show how the war (eventually) came about, and with third part to show the impact that war would have, I felt that (unfortunately) at times it fell almost too much into that age-old trap for the mid-part of trilogies: all build-up, with no real pay-off.
Death in the Aegean
Book
When private banker Stefanie Adams travels to Greece on vacation, she is suspected of murdering a...
Stone Blind
Book
'So to mortal men, we are monsters. Because of our flight, our strength. They fear us, so they call...
Greek Mythology Historical fiction Retellings Feminism
Daughters of Sparta
Book
Two sisters parted. Two women blamed. Two stories reclaimed. As princesses of Sparta, Helen and...
Historical fiction Greek Mythology Retellings Greece
And what an amazing heroine Atalanta is - the only woman amongst the Argonauts on their quest for the Golden Fleece, she can run faster than the men, beat the best at wrestling, shoot arrows more accurately and hunt wild animals. All activities completely unexpected for women of the time. But Atalanta was raised by a bear from when she was abandoned as an infant, and then nurtured by Artemis and her nymphs in Artemis’ own forest.
When Atalanta leaves the safety of Artemis’ forest to go on her adventures, Artemis warns her that she must remain a virgin - if she doesn’t and she consequently marries, it will be her undoing.
So you just know what’s going to happen!
I loved this book, I loved Atalanta, I love thatGreek mythology is having something of a renaissance in the last few years (but has it ever not been popular in one way or another?), and I love these Retellings where the women are front and centre.
This is just perfect - more please!!