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Daughter of Troy: A Magnificent Saga of Courage, Betrayal, Devotion, and Destiny [Mass Market Paperback]

Sarah B. Franklin (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 5, 2002

The rightful-born queen of Lyrnessos, Briseis watched helplessly from the battlements as her husband and brothers were crushed by the invincible army of King Agamemnon. Taken into slavery, the proud, beautiful seer became the prize of Prince Achilles, the conquering Greeks' mightiest hero. But passion forged chains stronger than any iron, binding the hearts of captive and captor with a love that knew no equal, and when Troy fell, great Achilles promised his beloved Briseis would reign at his side as queen of Thessaly. Yet the jealousy of a ruthless king and the whims of the capricious deities would deny the lovers their happiness. As the flames of war rose higher around them, the prophetess vowed to save the beloved warrior for whom her dark gift foretold doom -- even if it meant defying the gods themselves.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Since the writings of Homer, humankind has been fascinated by the tales of the great heroes of ancient Greece. In her debut novel, Franklin takes us to the walls of Troy and presents to us the men and women behind the myths. In this rich and tightly woven tapestry of story and history, we witness the grandeur and the destruction of Troy through the eyes of Briseis, once queen of Lyrnessos and now the captive and consort of Achilles. Briseis is bound to Achilles by more than just her chains, but when she catches the eye of Agamemnon, trouble starts brewing in the Greek camp. Maps and a list of the characters help guide readers through the text. Well recommended for all lovers of historical fiction.?Jane Baird, Anchorage Municipal Libs., AK
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

"A gratefully structured narrative that is sure to leave readers of intelligent historical fiction eager for her next venture." (Publisher's Weekly )

"Well recommended for all lovers of historical fiction." (Library Journal )

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 544 pages
  • Publisher: HarperTorch (March 5, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380818302
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380818303
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 4.6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #660,484 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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29 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A look at Ancient Troy, February 10, 2000
This review is from: Daughter of Troy (Paperback)
This book was immensely entertaining. It's a retelling of Homer's classic epic "The Iliad", through the eyes of Achilles' slave/concubine, Briseis. The story is the same enduring tale that has become a classic over the years. However, it sometimes reads like a cheesy romance novel. In my opinion, there were too many sex scenes that were really not related to the plot. I like a good sex scene as much as anyone, but it's a bit too much in this book, which is the reason it only gets three stars from me.

If you are interested in this book, I would recommend that you instead check out Marion Zimmer Bradley's "The Firebrand", which is a similar novel in that it's a retelling of the Iliad through the eyes of a minor character - Kassandra (Cassandra), Hector's sister - only the writing is much better.

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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A woman's experience beneath the walls of Troy..., August 2, 1998
This review is from: Daughter of Troy (Paperback)
I picked this one up w/some trepidation as the blurb on the back and a quick scan of the pages within suggested a bodice-ripper built on the foundation stones of that most revered of all things Greek -- The Iliad. I was pleased to see I was wrong. This is a tale of the Trojan War from a woman's perspective, particularly from the point of view of Briseis, the slave girl and victory prize of Achilles, over whom all the sturm und drang of that marvelous tale is raised. And it's a good one.

For those who don't know the tale, it essentially recounts what happens to the Greek and Trojan armies in the final year of the bitter Trojan siege, when the Greek over-king, Agamemnon, forced to give up his own victory prize, the girl Chryseis because of a god's anger, seizes the slave girl of his greatest hero and war-leader, Achilles, as a consolation prize. The resultant pique of the proud Achilles leaves the Greeks without a champion and gives the Trojans a chance to reclaim the initiative on the battlefield. Not promising for a tale told entirely from a woman's perspective. And yet, the use of Briseis as witness and recounter of events is inspired. In fact, the author has succeeded admirably. The prose is brilliantly evocative of the times and ancient tale it has to tell, without being stale or hackneyed. Never once are we troubled with the "wine-dark sea" (an Homeric catch phrase, much overused these days), although the prose still manages to conjure up the land and climate of the country in which this all presumably occurred...as well as the culture of the people among whom the tale is set.

The "voice" is mostly right, too. A woman's voice, begun as an old crone recounting her life to a wandering stranger, shifting quickly to a flashback of the seminal event of the tale beneath the Trojan walls, shifting again to this woman's emergence into young womanhood in her home city of Lyrnessos, a minor town within the Trojan orbit, only to take us back to the events under Troy's walls . . . the story we hear moves quickly and does not, for the most part, prove jarring or inconsistent with the times and events it has to tell of. The story of the Iliad is here portrayed as an almost conventional love story between Briseis and the mighty Achilles, but it works, as well, on the level of the original tale, the tragic encounter with violence and death which bring all men, as well as women, down in the end to the place of destruction and dissolution.

There are a few weak moments unfortunately: when Chryseis, in the early part of the tale, observing Briseis in one of those Cretan gowns which exposes a woman's breasts, remarks that "you seem to be bursting out of your dress, darling" -- I thought I'd strayed into a Beverly Hills dinner party, or something worse. But for the most part, these odd moments do not detract overmuch from the tale.

If I had one real complaint it is that the first half of the book is really much better than the second, perhaps because the slave-girl's perspective necessarily excludes Briseis from so much of the action, causing the events of the war to be told, in large part, via second hand accounts. The best parts of the book are certainly when we see Briseis' life through her own first hand experiences and encounter the world of the eastern Mediterranean as retold in the first half of the book, all so freshly brought to life via this author's vivid and poetic prose.

Perhaps another reason for the weakening of the book in its second half is the large role Briseis' sexual adventures seem to play in the tale. Rather explicity recounted and certainly interesting, I came to conclude, in the second half, that too much of Briseis' recollections revolved around the copulations she recalls and the men who "have entered" her. It may have been likely that a slave girl and war prize would have had these sorts of experiences as a central part of her world, rather than the great battles beneath the besieged city's walls or the deliberations of the men who were prosecuting the dreadful war, but it seemed, ultimately, to trivialize the tale, making the great events mere reflections of the greater sex Briseis has with her hero Achilles, who killed her husband (a rather unpleasant fellow, by the way), her beloved brothers, and sacked and detroyed her native city. One would have thought that Briseis had reason to dwell on other things besides the size of Achilles' back and arms and other appurtenances, in light of the losses she has suffered. And Achillles sometimes seems to be nothing more than a Fabio look-alike, some woman's idea of the ideal sex object -- able to go on all night, providing both mount and rider, on demand, to his discriminating and lustful female partner, depending on her preferences and mood.

At the risk of turning a good review bad, however, let me stress that the story is well-told although it weakens substantially at the end for the reasons I've cited. But this is a tough one to tell, given that Homer and the other ancient Greek bards have all done it so well before. I think the author has here done a better job than some "contemporaries", certainly vividly and realistically capturing the feel of the ancient cults of the old proto-Greeks (better than Mary Renault, it seems to me, in The King Must Die, and nearly as good as Robert Graves did it in Hercules, My Shipmate) . . . and offered a highly literate and compelling modern narrative window into the great story of The Iliad, besides. If the sex seemed a bit much, well, perhaps that is a necessary concession to draw in today's reader (or at least to convince a publisher that this will occur) -- though I'd have been a bit more conservative in that regard if I'd have had the skill and inspiration to pen such a well-told tale myself.

SWM
author of The King of Vinland's Saga
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars ... a good story anyway, January 4, 2003
This review is from: Daughter of Troy: A Magnificent Saga of Courage, Betrayal, Devotion, and Destiny (Mass Market Paperback)
I agree with other reviewers who say there is too much irrelevant sex in _Daughter or Troy_. That said, on to the good stuff.

You might remember this book's heroine, Briseis, from the Iliad--Achilles's concubine, stolen away by King Agamemnon. But in _Daughter of Troy_, Briseis is so much more than a bimbo... She's an outspoken, brave, sardonic, intelligent princess, gifted with powers of prophecy. These powers break her heart, though, because knowing the future does not necessarily mean you can change it...

We read about Briseis's childhood at the court of the small kingdom of Lyrnessos, her adolescence in which she discovered sex and learned about the ruling of a kingdom, and her young adulthood as a prize of the invading Greeks. I truly liked Briseis and enjoyed spending time reading about her; kudos to the author for writing a compelling, strong female character without loading her down in modern-day political correctness.

I also liked the dark look at the ancient deities. It is always refreshing to read historical novels where the ancient pagans aren't practicing modern Wicca. The gods are scary in this book, appropriate given that they were thought to require constant sacrifice and to interfere often in the lives of mortals.

Gripes: I wanted to know more about Briseis's life after Achilles's death. Franklin shows her as an old woman, but she only tells her story up until about age seventeen, when the war ends. It is truly sad to imagine that nothing much of interest happened to her after that, especially with so many years ahead of her. Perhaps I can hold out hope for a sequel. Second, people believed Cassandra too often! LOL!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Nothing remained of the day except a red wound between earth and sky. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
host leader, grape festival, bath attendant, war band
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Great King, Our Lady, King Altes, Mount Ida, Queen Briseis, Cape Sigeum, Greater Ajax, King Priam, Queen Alcandre, Bay of Troy, Cousin Aeneas, Holy Troy, King Briseus, Lord of Storms, Lord Poseidon, Diomedes of Argos, Fortunate Land, Plain of Troy, Prince Hector, Scaian Gate, Would Agamemnon
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