Penelope, wife of Odysseus, embarks on an epic adventure of her own after her husband returns from his wanderings in this artfully crafted work, an extended narrative poem in the style of Homer (via Richard Lattimore's translations of The Iliad and The Odyssey). The book opens with a startling revelation: while Odysseus has been off on his journeys, his wife, Penelope, has been raising twin daughters, Ailanthis and Nerianne, who were conceived just before he left and have now become young women. Both have ambitions of their own, and after a brief family conference, Penelope and her two daughters visit the Prophetess of Pytho to clarify their respective fates. Following the oracle's prediction, Nerianne elects to stay behind with her and exercise her healing gift of song. Penelope and Ailanthis, meanwhile, set off to visit Helen of Troy and seek a cure for the twins' brother, Telemachos, who has been grievously wounded in an attack by a mysterious beast. After their time in Troy, the women move on to an encounter with Penthesilea, the queen of the Amazons, who tries to entice both Ailanthis and Penelope to remain with her. Rawlings shows a flair for the format with her lively, smoothly flowing narrative verse ("I could not keep my smile within me. So there we stood:/two victors flushed with success of the battle or the hunt"), though she occasionally lets her modern values leak into the storytelling. Overall, the author turns a potentially dry, academic conceit into vibrant fiction, bringing to new life the female figures who played a pivotal role in one of the seminal works of world literature. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
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A novel in rolling lines of verse a la Richmond Lattimore's translations of Homer may seem unlikely to be a page-turner, but that is what this startlingly inventive book is. Its form is precisely appropriate to its style, for this is the story of left-behind, stay-at-home epic wife Penelope, who in the Odyssey does little more than fend off suitors while her husband, aiming in the general direction of home, adventures around the Mediterranean. Rawlings starts where Homer leaves off, as Odysseus finally reclaims throne, land, and wife. But surprises are at hand. There are twin daughters, conceived before Odysseus departed and raised in such secrecy that even Telemachos, their brother, was kept in the dark and so couldn't reveal their existence when he met his father in the Odyssey. Penelope's solemn oath to Athena demands that she and her daughters travel to Delphi, but Odysseus is unwilling to abandon his fantasy that Penelope hasn't matured in his absence, despite the fact that she has been running the kingdom. An injury to Telemachos changes the king's mind, and the three females embark on their own odyssey, made more urgent by the need to find a cure for the prince. Stunning scenes follow, especially Penelope's encounters with the Delphic oracle and the warrior Amazons, before a passionate suitor makes Penelope consider whether her loyalty has been misplaced. Perfectly blending form, style, and content, Rawlings makes an unforgettable character out of a mythic cypher. PatriciaMonaghan.
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