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Andromakhe - An Epic Novel of Troy and a Woman's Triumphant Valor
 
 
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Andromakhe - An Epic Novel of Troy and a Woman's Triumphant Valor [Paperback]

Kristina O'Donnelly (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

Price: $21.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

June 25, 2006
"Kristina O'Donnelly does it again! Get ready to be swept away in this magnificently written classic novel of history, love, war, suspense, action, bravery and mystery. Kristina's research of history combined with this fascinating tale takes the reader on an exciting fast paced journey. Andromakhe is a well written, hauntingly beautiful story. A must-read epic for all. (It would make a stupendous movie too.) Readers of Mary Renault and Marion Zimmer Bradley are certain to enjoy Andromakhe!" Caryn Day-Suarez, President - POW! Toastmasters - Jacksonville, Host of "The POW Show" - Weekly on WJGR 1320 AM Kristina O'Donnelly takes the immortal tale of Troy - gods, heroes, and battles, but gives us the woman's take. The strong women that are victimized by the violence, yet survive and ultimately rise above it. For thousands of years, Hector and Andromache of the Iliad have symbolized the archetypical loving and loyal husband and wife. Most novels about the Trojan War end with the Fall of Troy. But here, as we dwell in Andromâkhe's life, we have an account that encompasses the main as well as pre and post-Iliad years. Love, hate, greed, war, intrigue, heroes and villains combine with authenticated geography/history, offering an intimate view into the Bronze Age. O'Donnelly has done a great job taking the violent male-centered story of The Iliad and bringing it a female perspective. Men get the glory, women do the suffering (men suffer too, of course, but it's often their choice--women have fewer choices, and had fewer yet in those ancient days). Andromakhe is a powerful novel and the must-read story for 2006.

Editorial Reviews

Review

... a grim, hard-hitting story showing the subjugation of women that was and still is standard practice in much of the world." Piers Anthony, author, Xanth and Geodyssey series. --On record.

Judge #1: The language is delicious. Description beautifully worded. (O'Donnelly is) One of the BEST from the group of writers (local POW/FWA). Very well edited w/little to no error in grammar and story line. Judge # 2: This book is a unique approach to the story of Troy. Judge # 4: Great romance and historical story. 2007 POW! Awards. The judges of this prestigious award are professors and teachers from Florida Community College of Jacksonville at North Campus, but they prefer to remain anonymous. --On record.

About the Author

Award-winning author of exotic, multicultural, international novels, Kristina O'Donnelly was born in Rome, Italy, from an Austrian mother and Italian father, and raised in Istanbul, Turkey. She was a journalist and poet in Turkey. "Andromakhe - An Epic Novel of Troy and a Woman's Triumphant Valor" is her seventh novel. Based on the Trojan War, "Andromakhe" is the sequel to the contemporary travelogue/suspense novel, Trojan Enchantment. Andromakhe has won 1st Place, Historical Fiction, POW! Awards, 2006-07. Kristina's diversified rucksack of professional experiences span 25 + years and include acting, writing (journalist, columnist, magazine editor, and publisher). Married to her soulmate, Michael, of County Armagh, Northern Ireland, Kristina feels at home in Turkey, Ireland, as well as U.S.A. Her main body of work is Lands of the Morning , a series of 10 novels. Kaleidoscopic, exotic, international, ethnically diverse, Lands of the Morning is Michenesque in scope. The pervading theme in the Lands of the Morning Series is love, as well as social justice, explored on every level, controversial, all-consuming, and ultimately, redeeming. The trials, tribulations and triumphs of three respective families are traced from their roots in the mists of pre-history. They are the Berks, Trojans, the Alkibiades', Achaeans, and the Kayhans, Turks. Skeins of exotic people, places and customs rooted in Turkey and branching out to Ireland, Israel, United States of America, Italy, Greece, and Saudi Arabia, interlace the subplots with the fast-growing scheme of events, climaxing in an unexpected denouements. The fruit of a lifetime of research and writing, this series is fiction based upon authentic, contemporary as well as historical backgrounds and events. The Horseman, lead novel of the Lands of the Morning Series, has won two awards, including 1st Place for Multicultural Fiction, in 2005, by POW! (Promoting Outstanding Writers) in FL, USA.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 528 pages
  • Publisher: Rose International Publishing House; 1st edition (June 25, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1930574592
  • ISBN-13: 978-1930574595
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,563,043 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Vita aka Kristina aka Karina, nicknamed A Lady For All Seasons, was an actress as well as an author and journalist, and more photos of her stormy, globe-trotting, universe-tripping life, can be found at www.ladyliterature.com

Kismet seems to have decreed that author editor journalist VITA KRISTINA O'DONNELLY, aka Vita Vendresha and Karina di Cuore, should lead a globe-trotting, multi-cultural, chameleon-life wrought with romance and drama, and thus end up writing thought-provoking exotic novels. Her odyssey began with her birth in Rome, Italy, after the Second World War. Her father Sami Alberto, aka David Vendresha, was a freedom-fighter, journalist and editor, and her Austrian mother Geraldine von Landeck, an opera singer and his best comrade-in-ideals.

Having met in Vienna, Austria during the raging fires of the Second World War, and married in Prague, Czechoslovakia, David and Geraldine then settled in Rome, Italy, at the end of the war, and Kristina was born 2 years later. A short while after, due to political persecution, the threesome had to leave Italy and settled in Turkey.

Growing up in Istanbul, in the 1960s, Kristina fell in love with Turkey and her gallant people. She was a child film-star and later a poet and a journalist and published a daily column in the major Istanbul daily. A die-hard romantic and idealist imbued with a can-do, will-do spirit, she strove to the best of her abilities to champion the rights of the down-trodden. At the age of 17, she defied her parents, eloped and married a 44-year old Turkish artist, who had convinced her that he shared her inclinations. The the union produced a much beloved son, Faik Kurt. However, the April-December marriage of an artist and writer, was soon confronted by the realities of life and sunk in stormy seas.

Six years later, Kristina had no choice but to leave, under traumatic circumstances.

After her arrival in New York, she restarted her life virtually from point zero. Although fluent in German, Turkish, Italian, her English could be termed at best "pidgin,' and her experience as an artist, writer and journalist, counted naught in the New World - and walking a road inlaid with razor-blades, she worked as a 24/7 maid, cook, window-cleaner, hair-stylist, door-to-door delivery person, and later on as a real estate sales person.

Few years later, Kristina married her soul-mate, blue-eyed Hibernian, Michael O'Donnelly (which led her to travel throughout Ireland and thus causing her to fall in love with the Irish people as well).

In time she moved up to be employed for the New York Daily News as an advertising rep., and then trailblazed as a newspaper union officer (The Newspaper Guild of America). Not surprisingly, her experiences in this electric environment inspired her to write the contemporary novel, Ride the Eagle (originally published by Worldwide Library; 2nd publishing by Rose International Publishing House). Readers called this novel "... a piece of Americana and a celebration of idealism." Ride the Eagle was sold in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, England, Spain, and Australia. (In May of 2003, Ride the Eagle, retitled as Sevgili Dusmanim (Beloved Enemy) was published in Turkey, by Epsilon Publishing House.)This was followed by the Turkish translation of The Scorpion Child, retitled as Sonsuzluga Isyan.

So far Kristina O'Donnelly has published 9 novels, with 5 more sitting in the pipeline.
And so, her quest to touch and perchance to help heal, the Universal Human Heart, goes on ....

The proverbial question begs: CAN YOU GO HOME AGAIN?

 

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A different strokes for different folks, kind of Andromache, September 4, 2006
This review is from: Andromakhe - An Epic Novel of Troy and a Woman's Triumphant Valor (Paperback)
"Andromakhe" is an interesting, well-researched, but for some readers, quite unusual take on an old legend. While O'Donnelly is reasonably faithful to the original storyline, meaning this novel is not "alternate history," therefore Andromache does marry Hector, he is the love of her life forever, she does have an existence apart from what we are generally familiar with. For example, she is a scribe, loves reading and researching, from philosophy to history, has ESP, ponders reincarnation, communicates with animals, and trains herself to wield the sword. But she is not exactly an amazon warrioress a la M.Z. Bradley's Cassandra in The Firebrand, but neither is she the spoiled, selfish brat from Kolchis, Andromache is portrayed as in The Firebrand. Well, I happen to like The Firebrand, so this is not a putdown of Bradley's novel, just an observation of how different authors can interpret familiar characters differently. For example, in David Gemmel's excellent novel, Lord of the Silver Bow (Book I in Gemmel's Troy series), Andromache is presented as a (comparately speaking) mature woman in her twenties, a priestess with the skill of an amazon in how she uses bow and arrow, sexually liberated (or a swinger, depending on your p.o.v on these matters) who enjoys sex with women but falls in love with Aeneas, Prince of Dardania, then agrees to love and marry Hector.

In the opening of "Andromakhe", we meet her at the age of 13, as a loving daughter in her father's palace in Anatolian Thebe, and we start walking in her shoes (and her soul). We get acquainted with the era, customs, locale, her parents and her complex relationship with them. Andromache has a close-encounter with what seems to be the Goddess, and later, during a near-death experience (while out of her body) has an ethereal meeting with the man who might or might not have been a brother of hers during a past life.

Another deviation from the legend is her relationship with Helenos, Hector's brother (according to various legends, the man she weds many years after Hector's death, while they are in exile in Greece). They are still teenagers when a tender love springs between them -- long before she is promised to Hector. But when the "game of empire" demands that the heir of Troy takes her to wife, Andromache, dutiful (albeit somewhat rebellious, as befits a teenager) daughter that she is, is obligated to go along with it.
What I found believable is how Hector and Andromache ultimately fell in love with each other, with a devotion that transcended time and space.
The writing style is not heavy-handed, with good historical details that illuminate the "backstage" of the great war, politics and psychology. Overall, Andromakhe the Novel covers a lot of new ground with a plucky heroine who has willpower, stamina, faith, and thus, triumphs in her own way.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A different slant on a Greek legend, November 28, 2006
This review is from: Andromakhe - An Epic Novel of Troy and a Woman's Triumphant Valor (Paperback)
This novel recreates the life of Andromakhe of Greek legend. It covers her marriage to Hector, her life in Troy, and what happened to her after the city's fall. Showing the strength of one woman in a male dominated society, it goes into detail about her doomed relationship with Hector and brutal the death of their son. It is action packed and a fascinating portrait of Andromakhe and the life she might have led. If you are familiar with Greek legend you will recognize many of the characters.

Although the book does not claim to be fact, there is a lot of historical research woven into the plot. The story is beautifully written and it is a creative story of strength and love. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this novel.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars O'Donnelly has insight!, April 16, 2008
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This review is from: Andromakhe (Kindle Edition)
The Battle of ancient Troy is the setting for Kristina O' Donnelly's historical novel, `Andromakhe.' O'Donnelly brings us into the exotic world of the Mediterranean along with its beautiful and brutal customs. This lush story hearkens back to Homer's classic depiction of the 10 year siege, laid out in the epic poem "The Iliad."

O' Donnelly breathes new life into Homer's ancient tale and also brings to light something absent from the original work: a female perspective. The story is told in first person and the reader is able to understand and sympathize with Andromache's constant distress at having married a great warrior during the time of this epic war. The struggles Andromache endures are timeless. Having been an army wife myself I could easily relate to the bittersweet love and respect a wife has for her husband as the questions of war and service to one's country come first. Many military wives have lived this long and painful road. On one hand, we are proud of our warriors and believe in what they are fighting and dying for. On the other, we are fearful for their safety and want only to hold them close far away from the cries and clanging of battles. "When the fighting resumed the next morning, there was no holding Hektor back. I begged him, begged him on my knees, sobbing, screaming, kissing his hands, pulling my hair out in bunches - dignity be damned - to recuperate for just one more day. He paid me no heed."

The name Andromache literally means "battle of men" and through this story the reader is able to observe how she lives up to that name. Andromache is absolutely supportive of her husband in his effort to prepare his soldiers and although she has a mind of her own, she is a dedicated and loving wife -- giving her husband comfort he needs while bearing the crushing weight of so much responsibility on his shoulders.

After Hektor is slain by Achilles and his body is brought back through King Priam, Andromache must bear witness to the death of her soul-mate. Nevertheless, Andromache knows her duty as a mother. "I held Hektor's cartouche ring tightly in my fist. Hektor's cloak, unfinished, was now ashes in his tomb; but at least one important duty still left for me: To raise Skamandrios. The hope of Troia rested upon my little son."

The author uses lush figurative language to give the reader a vivid and accurate picture of the climactic battles between the legendary warriors such as Ajax, Hektor, and Achilles. Though, it is not merely the violent clashes which characterize this story. At its core it is about the love between Andromache and her husband Hektor as they face the seemingly never-ending siege on their beloved city. The reader can feel the palpable tension first by the inexorable march of the Greeks to the outer walls of Troy, and later to the siege itself. The drama is exquisite and being told from inside the ancient city, the reader feels the suspense building awaiting the deadly Greek army's onslaught, just as the main characters do.

O' Donnelly clearly has a scholarly insight into these events and is able to grant unique personalities to all of these characters in a mesmerizing way. I have not experienced this feeling of being drawn back in time since reading `The Mists of Avalon' some years ago. Beyond my own personal curiosity surrounding `The Iliad' after having studied it in graduate school and reading various English translations on more than a few occasions, I have always been interested in understanding the motivations of the women in this story. What was beautiful Helen's reaction to being considered one of causes of this war? How does Andromache deal with the death of her husband and later, the brutal slaying of her baby, Astynax? How does Queen Hekabe manage to keep her composure as her husband and children are marching into nearly certain destruction? It is these kinds of questions which the author strives to answer with her portrayal of these powerful and influential women during this tragic time in their lives.

I admit that I shed tears while reading the accounts of Andromache's pain and loss but also rejoiced with her triumphs as she managed to find a measure of peace within her life. I highly recommend this novel to anyone who loves the ancient classics from Western civilization as well as anyone interested in reading about strong female characters and the choices they must make in a male dominated society.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Goodbye, Viktor, farewell, my beloved Priam," Rosemary Thompson whispered, standing upon the hill facing the frosty dawn inching to light up the Trojan Plain in Hissarlik, Turkey. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cartouche ring, bear with courage, toy chariot, war helmet
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
King Peleos, Dea Madre, Mount Ida, Pyrrhos Neoptolemos, Old Father, Great Kind Mother, King Priam, Elysian Fields, King Polymestor, Chief Hierophant, House of Priam, Queen of Troia, Defender of the City, Helen of Sparta, King of Kings, Nurse Mykale, Princess of Troia, Skaian Tower, Skamandrios Astyanax, Helenos Priamides, King Lykomedes, King of Goats, New Troia, Pyrrhos Akhilleides, Sacred Way
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