Book cover of The Silence of the Girls

Book description

A GUARDIAN BEST BOOK OF THE 21ST CENTURY

'Chilling, powerful, audacious' The Times

'Magnificent. You are in the hands of a writer at the height of her powers' Evening Standard

There was a woman at the heart of the Trojan War whose voice has been silent - until now. Discover…

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Why read it?

9 authors picked The Silence of the Girls as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

The ‘girls’ are the Trojan women, voiceless in Homer’s Iliad except, briefly, Andromache, Cassandra, and Hecuba.

Women drive the plot, from Helen, the Spartan queen abducted by the Trojan prince Paris, who is blamed for starting it, to Briseis, the Trojan captive Agamemnon takes from Achilles, but they say little.

Most of the chapters in Silence of the Girls are first-person in Briseis’ voice, with interspersed third-person chapters focusing on Achilles and Patroclus. We see the war from a broad, realistic perspective, but the tragedy in the center is of the women—as the Greek playwright Euripides recognizes in his play…

This is a retelling of The Iliad from the point of view of the Trojan women. As well as being powerful emotionally, it's an interesting way of becoming immersed in the world of the ancient Greeks. I came away from it with a very different point of view of the narcissistic Achilles, despite Brad Pitt!

It turns the notion of heroism during the Trojan wars on its head - because it's seen through the eyes of a woman, Queen Briseis. It's got two wonderful follow-ups,. The Women of Troy and The Voyage Home. What a writer!

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Book cover of Serpent Visions

Serpent Visions by Jinny Webber,

Set in pre-literate Bronze Age Greece, Serpent Visions reimagines the enigmatic myth of the gender-switching seer Teiresias. Walking in the deep woods, he strikes apart two coupling serpents and transforms into a woman. Seven years later, she, now called Teira, encounters mating serpents, strikes between them, and becomes male again.…

I love the descriptions Pat Barker, a British author, uses as she delves into the cruelty and ugliness of war. This reframe of victors, the Greeks who are winners of the Trojan War is richly written; the characters of the captors are despicable as they live in the ruins of a glorious city, enslaving women, but punished by their gods who trap them away from their homes.

Revenge is in the air as the raped and degraded Trojan women, spoils of the war, conspire while living with their Greek captors. What I love about it, above all, is the bleak…

From Sophia's list on retelling ancient Greek myths.

Pat Barker is a fantastic author, but what I especially love about this book is that it’s re-telling a well-known Greek myth through the eyes of a woman.

This subtle shift in perspective changes the story from one of heroism to one of survival. It is a cleverly conceived and beautifully rendered adaptation from the epic to the personal, from the grand narrative to the intimate.

This book is highly recommended.

The story of Briseis, Achilles' prize that he was forced to give up to Agamemnon, is an eye-opening account of what happened to women at the time of the Trojan War. Their male relatives were slain and they were assigned as booty, spoils of war. Achilles, who was famously paired with Patroclus, is given depth of character here as is the long wait to attack Troy. Once again, the reader is transported to another world and that world becomes real. Barker's description of Achilles' relationship with his mother is another twist in the story and one for which there is…

From Leigh's list on capturing a moment in history.

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Book cover of The Wedding Shroud

The Wedding Shroud by Elisabeth Storrs,

In 406 BC, to seal a tenuous truce, young Roman Caecilia is wedded to Vel Mastarna, an Etruscan nobleman from Veii. Leaving her militaristic homeland, Caecilia is determined to remain true to Roman virtues while living among the sinful Etruscans. But, despite her best intentions, she is seduced by a…

Picture Achilles, the legendary hero, immortalised in Homer’s Iliad, conqueror of the siege of Troy. Now imagine what it must feel like to be a captive girl, handed over to Achilles as a trophy of war. Through the terrified eyes of the young Trojan Queen, Briseis, Barker brings the whole Trojan War to life. Her Achilles is no longer Homer’s half-immortal superman, but a remote, neurotic and expressionless brute who subjects Briseis to degrading days as a slave girl and hateful nightly couplings, but remains cold and impassive, while inwardly seething with his own suppressed insecurities. A vivid evocation…

From Maya's list on breathe new life into old stories.

Pat Barker writes superbly about the human costs of war, and in this book she re-tells Homer’s Illiad from the perspective not of the foot soldiers, the cannon fodder of ego-driven politician/heroes, but from the perspective of the vanquished women reduced to slavery and concubinage - Breseis, awarded to Achilles after her city is sacked, fought over by Agamemnon, Andromarche, Hector’s widow, reduced to slavery after her entire family has been slaughtered, Polyxena, the daughter of Priam and Hecuba, sacrificed by the Greeks... It is a sensuous, visceral retelling of the story, provocative and evocative. You become part of that…

I am a huge admirer of Pat Barker’s work. My expectations were high when I began reading The Silence of the Girls.

I was hugely rewarded. The book weaves together into a seamless, compelling narrative, all those themes that are so close to my writer’s heart. The silence that surrounds the lived experience of women down through the ages, and the necessity to hear the voice of the ‘ordinary’ woman as she negotiates her way through the maze of rules that were not made by her.

Here, the central character is Briseis, a woman awarded as a prize to…

From Catherine's list on ‘herstory’: breaking the silence.

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Book cover of Serpent Visions

Serpent Visions by Jinny Webber,

Set in pre-literate Bronze Age Greece, Serpent Visions reimagines the enigmatic myth of the gender-switching seer Teiresias. Walking in the deep woods, he strikes apart two coupling serpents and transforms into a woman. Seven years later, she, now called Teira, encounters mating serpents, strikes between them, and becomes male again.…

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