Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

This topic is about
The Song of Troy
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MAY 2014 (Group Read 2): The Song of Troy by Colleen McCullough

I guess that means that I won't get to this one until mid May (going off my slow reading rate of late)





I reserved the book at the library (via online catalogue) a week and a half ago and it is still showing 'available' and I am still sitting as the only reserve.
This is usually what happens when a book is missing.

Is always in the back of my mind when I reserve a book that shows available and they only have one copy. :\


Still, should get it this week sometime.

I might send them an email today to let them know, so they can tell me it is a missing copy. At least I'll be put out of my misery then.




I rather like the idea of an overall look rather than one POV.


Hope I get my copy soon. :)

I'm only through the first chapter but I quite like it so far.





I am loving the writing, though. And instead of reading it like I usually read fiction, I'm taking it the same way I took the 300 movies. It is a mythologized history, one where there are heroes and lovers and grand, epic adventures and war. Where the imagery is supposed to be sharper than real life.


Ah, sorry. I've read 8 chapters and I forgot we've gotten two Helens. But yes, I meant that (although she seems like the insta-love girl from what I remember in chapter 4 as well, just not him yet). I also gather this story would be hard to spoil because most people have read Homer, but I'm still going to put the spoiler tags, just don't think I did much damage with that spoiler. :P


I definitely need to read some more Troy and Greek stories from this era.


I definitely need to read some more Troy and Greek stories from this era."
You are a fast reader. :)



Thanks for giving members the heads up on that deal, Alison.



That will be great, Terri. Thank you!
It is on GR, but no page count.
ISBN: 0752814133
Imprint: London: Orion House, c1998
Pages: 404



I wonder what I would have made of them. When I am reading the same book as you, I have usually always agree with your opinion on the fantasy elements, Lia.

Most of the miracles or magical occurrence were explained, usually by the narrators themselves who gave the logical views. However, certain predictions by the seers (by the oracles or by the augur) still making my palm itch. I am hoping there will be explanations later. (view spoiler)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Song of Achilles (other topics)Dreaming the Eagle (other topics)
The Song of Troy (other topics)
The Grass Crown (other topics)
A Burnable Book (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
David Gemmell (other topics)David Gemmell (other topics)
David Gemmell (other topics)
Colleen McCullough (other topics)
The Song of Troy As urgent and passionate as if told for the first time, the narrative is passed from one character to another: Priam, King of Troy, doomed to make the wrong decisions for the right reasons; the Greek princess Helen, a self-indulgent beauty who deserts her boring husband for the sake of an equally self-indulgent beauty, the Trojan prince Paris; the haunted fighting machine, Achilles; the heroically noble hektor; the subtle and brilliant Odysseus; Agmemnon, King of Kings, who consents to the unspeakable in order to launch his thousand ships, and thus incurs the enmity of his terrifying wife, Klytemnestra. But where does human folly end? And where does the pitiless retribution of the Gods begin? The characters dazzle, swinging our sympathies from Greece to Troy and back again as each of them moves inexorably towards a fate even the Gods cannot avert.
Colleen McCullough's compelling, fascinating, novel shows readers of every generation the unforgettable power of a story that lies deep at the heart of Western culture, and still resonates today.