A brief comment in response to some reviewers who liked other of Mary Renault's historical novels, but didn't particularly like this one ... I first read this book when it came out, some time in the '80's, and wasn't especially taken with it. In the intervening 20 years, during which I have become a practicing poet and storyteller, my perceptions have changed: I now think it one her best, if not *the* best - subtle, insightful,...
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there are many reviews of ms. renault's work here already, so i will keep this very brief: the reason mary renault is my favorite author is that she can bring the emotional and human quality of her characters to the surface. she makes these long dead people with strange names come alive. she gives them a quotidian life. she makes them human, and humane. true, her knowledge of the ancient greeks is encyclopedic. true,...
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The classical world comes alive in all of Renault's books about Greece, and this is one of her best. Her scholarly background combined with her literary talent not only teaches the reader the factual history of the characters but gives them real personality and depth. Simonides, the blacksheep of his family rises from his rustic beginnings to the courts of the most powerful men of his time. We follow him from child to...
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This is a wonderful historical novel about the time of the lyric poets (of whom Sappho is the most famous) This is the life of Simonides, who lived in sixth century Greece during the time of the tyrants, the Persian wars, and a great floweirng of the arts (it preceded Pericles in the 5th century - the Golden Age). She brings Pisistratos and Solon to life. Eminently readable.
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