Read Online and Download Ebook The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller
Look and browse shelves by shelves to discover this publication. But at some point, it will certainly be nonsense. Due to this problem, we now provide the wonderful deal to develop the short method to acquire guides from several sources get in quick times. By this way, it will truly alleviate you making The Song Of Achilles: A Novel, By Madeline Miller so prepared to get in quick time. When you have done as well as obtained this publication, it is better for you to promptly begin reviewing. It will certainly lead you to get the disciplines and lessons promptly.
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller
Obtain your favourite publication simply in this site! This is a good site that you could see everyday, moreover each time you have leisure. And also the factors of why you should enter this site are that you can figure out great deals of collections books. Genre, kinds, and also publishers are various. But, when you have read this page, you will obtain a publication that we primarily supply. The Song Of Achilles: A Novel, By Madeline Miller is the title of guide.
As a book, featuring the wise and careful book is the standard one to always keep in mind. It needs to pick as well as pick the very best words selections or dictions that can influence the top quality of the book. The Song Of Achilles: A Novel, By Madeline Miller also features the easy language to be recognized by all individuals. When you assume that this publication appertains with you, choose it now. As a great publication, it gives not only the qualities of guides that we have actually given.
Why we provide this book for you? We sure that this is what you wish to review. This the correct book for your analysis material this time recently. By discovering this book here, it verifies that we constantly provide you the proper book that is required among the culture. Never ever question with the The Song Of Achilles: A Novel, By Madeline Miller Why? You will unknown how this book is really before reading it till you end up.
Actually, this is not a force for you to like this publication and also review until finish this book. We show you the outstanding publication. It will be so pity if you miss it. This is not the right time for you to miss the The Song Of Achilles: A Novel, By Madeline Miller not to read. It could aid you not just satisfying this holiday times. After holidays, you will certainly obtain something brand-new. Yeah, this book will actually lead you to life better. This is why; this recommended book is much uttered for you that wish to move on constantly.
“At once a scholar’s homage to The Iliad and startlingly original work of art by an incredibly talented new novelist….A book I could not put down.”—Ann Patchett“Mary Renault lives again!” declares Emma Donoghue, author of Room, referring to The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller’s thrilling, profoundly moving, and utterly unique retelling of the legend of Achilles and the Trojan War. A tale of gods, kings, immortal fame, and the human heart, The Song of Achilles is a dazzling literary feat that brilliantly reimagines Homer’s enduring masterwork, The Iliad. An action-packed adventure, an epic love story, a marvelously conceived and executed page-turner, Miller’s monumental debut novel has already earned resounding acclaim from some of contemporary fiction’s brightest lights—and fans of Mary Renault, Bernard Cornwell, Steven Pressfield, and Colleen McCullough’s Masters of Rome series will delight in this unforgettable journey back to ancient Greece in the Age of Heroes.
Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations
›
View or edit your browsing history
After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.
Product details
Paperback: 416 pages
Publisher: Ecco; 37696th edition (August 28, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0062060627
ISBN-13: 978-0062060624
Product Dimensions:
5.3 x 0.9 x 8 inches
Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.4 out of 5 stars
2,210 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#1,433 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Starting this book I was at a strong 3.5 stars, then it bumped up to 4, and then the end had me in such a mess that it suddenly became 5. A miracle this is.The story and plot revolves around the Trojan war and the moments before and after where Patroclus meets Achilles and laters waits for him. The flow is actually quite gentle, even during the war fighting. I had expected more action and heart racing moments, and that is maybe why I did not rush into a higher rating.However, even though I had a feeling of who and the knowledge of death, I was still struck hard. It did not come on suddenly, no. It crept slowly, clung to my heart and then watered in my eyes. It was the reaction to death that got me.The end is beautiful and sweet. It brings together the readers and the characters who are in pain and comforts us and makes us allies.The writing is also wonderful. It's poetic and lovely at times. Of course if you do not like things being compared to unrelated things, such as the plumpness of lips to that of a bee, then you will disagree with me here. Regardless, this is the writing style I most adore in moderation and thus have loved this book.
I have never read the Iliad, and I thought it might be fun to delve into a modern treatment of the story. This book had so many great reviews that it seemed worth buying. However, I stopped reading the novel when I was about 30% of the way through. By this time it became clear that the author was going to make the romance between Patroclus and Achilles the centerpiece of the book. For instance as teens, Achilles and Patroclus spend two or three years in the wilderness with a centaur who is supposed to be instructing Achilles in the art of war... except he doesn't. Patroclus is not supposed to be in the wilderness with them, but he tags along anyway. This means that Patroclus himself has the opportunity to learn the art of war from this great centaur who taught Heracles how to fight, but Patroclus doesn't either. It appears that the only reason these two were with centaur in the wilderness for a couple years was to allow the author to crate a bucolic love nest for the boys. And for unexplained reasons, Achilles' mother, Thetis, seems to have always hated Patroclus. Again from a Romance-novel point-of-view, her intense animosity seems to exist only to create a "forbidden love" situation between Patroclus and Achilles. It all seemed so contrived.
For better or for worse, the Homeric epics are a bedrock part of the Western literary canon. Madeline Miller's The Song of Achilles looks at The Iliad from a fresh perspective: that of Patroclus, Achilles' closest companion. Since this is a retelling of a classic story (a genre to which I am predisposed), we already know how it's going to play out: Agamemnon will steal a slave girl claimed by Achilles, leading to the hero refusing to fight for the Greeks, leading to Patroclus donning his armor and being slain by Hector of Troy, leading to Achilles killing Hector and dragging him around the walls of his city, only to be killed himself by an arrow from Hector's brother Paris. What's different is what comes before and between.As most of us know, it was not uncommon in Ancient Greek life for older men to have sexual relationships with younger men. Homosexual relationships between men of the same age, however, were rarer. When I was taught The Iliad, even in college, the bond between Patroclus and Achilles was usually described as just a deep friendship (lip service was paid to the idea they could have been lovers but it was never taught as being the more persuasive interpretation). Miller's novel, however, roots itself in the alternate interpretation: she presents us with Achilles, the most gifted warrior in Greece, as a man in a loving and stable lifelong relationship with Patroclus.It would actually be more accurate to say she presents us with Patroclus as the romantic partner of Achilles: the story belongs to Patroclus, it is told through his eyes. Patroclus as created by Miller is a gentle soul, a disappointment to his aggressive father, who is banished when he kills another child purely by accident. He is sent to Peleus, father of Achilles, to be fostered, and is chosen by Achilles of all the young men at court to be his companion. Their relationship only gradually becomes romantic, much to the disgust of Achilles' river goddess mother, Thetis. She conspires more than once to break the couple apart, but their love is too strong and they remain together until the end. Miller explains Achilles' rage over the theft of his slave girl as being not about being deprived of a lover, but as being disrespected as the greatest soldier in the army by having his rightfully-claimed prize taken away.I found it a much more enjoyable take on the story than the original. Miller really gets the time to develop Patroclus and Achilles as characters in depicting them from boyhood all the way through adulthood. She paints a very devoted relationship between them: though both briefly experiment with sex with women, they never stray from each other and Achilles refuses to leave Patroclus despite strong maternal pressure to do so. Since Miller's Patroclus isn't a skilled or enthusiastic warrior and instead serves the Greek contingent at Troy as a healer, most of the battlefield scenes that I find so boring to read are left out entirely. This is a solid read for fans of historical fiction and/or classical retellings.
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller PDF
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller EPub
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller Doc
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller iBooks
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller rtf
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller Mobipocket
The Song of Achilles: A Novel, by Madeline Miller Kindle