Daughter of Troy | |||||||||||||
Sarah B. Franklin | |||||||||||||
Avon Books, 432 pages | |||||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Briseis, daughter of Briseus, heir to the throne of Lyrnessos, would appear to have everything. Unfortunately
for her (and most of the other characters in this novel), she was simply born at the wrong time. Life for
anyone in this period was short and brutal. Life for a woman was all that and less. On the up side, it
was filled with lots of consensual sex, non-consensual sex, and sex with men you just set eyes on five
minutes before. And most of the time, you're chattel. Go figure.
Growing up in the royal family provides some comforts, but Briseis seems destined for a life of pain
and loss. To make matters worse, the future is an open book for the princess; she learns at an early
age that she is burdened/blessed with the ability to read omens. Her glimpses of the gods' plans
bring her rare moments of happiness and endless grief. She cannot avoid foreseeing the dark times ahead.
The Trojan War is inevitable and Lyrnessos is a small kingdom; the minor players will be swallowed
up, regardless of their loyalties.
Franklin's version of this era is an entertaining one. The writing flows smoothly and
maintains the reader's interest. Colourful, legendary figures, seen in the daily details
of the lives, make for high adventure and down-to-earth survival fare.
But, like most epics, they offer little more.
Despite "growing up" with Briseis, we learn nothing of the depths of personality. Perhaps, because
she has none. Like the rest of the extensive cast of characters (feel no shame at referring to
the "People And Places" section in the back of the book), she fairly sparkles with
shallowness. The frequent deaths in Daughter of Troy fail to make a ripple on the
reader. It is impossible to manufacture any concern or involvement with the pretty or mighty
or noble creatures paraded across the page. Briseis, heroine or not, is just another surprisingly
clever, unsinkably brave fairy tale princess.
A princess who has sex at the drop of a mantle, like all her peers. That, oddly enough is not a big
draw. The sex is strangely unarousing. Orgies read as rather pale action sequences, less enticing
than the battle scenes.
But, ignore my petty complaints, it's a Trojan/Greek romp. If I was a bit embarrassed to be seen
with it in public, that's just the bodice-ripper aspect. Daughter of Troy is a fresh slant
on a familiar subject, by an author who has done her research. In fact, the most interesting part
of the book may well be the Postscript, where Franklin explores and explains the inconsistencies
between archaeological evidence and existing literature. Although she follows Homer's scrambled
record, it's just possible she comes nearer to the truth than the "classics" forced on us in school.
Certainly, it goes down easier.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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