| ✨REVIEW✨
🦋Characters:
➡️I admire Patroclus’ feminine sensitivity and maternal care, which balanced Achilles’ steely internal nature as a demigod, even softened his heart for pride and fame.
➡️Odysseus has always been the wisest king, I admire his manner of persuasion, clever suggestions, and fair mind.
➡️In the film ‘Troy’, Menalaus was portrayed as a barbaric, childish, greedy king, while in this book, he seemed to be a noble diplomat. He suggested to fight in a civilized manner, instead of a messy war.
➡️If I am to face Thetis, I would tell her how foolish she is in her attitude towards the mortals. She is a nymph and has seen how she was poorly treated by other gods for having much less power. I would expect a little kindness from her and stop her prejudices. Though I felt her vulnerability as a mother in the end.
🦋Story:
➡️It is slow paced in the beginning but gets interesting on the near end. I knew about Achilles and this might bore anyone who does, but I think being told thru the lens of someone who has deeply connected to him, humanized him. In this way, the reader can have a fresh look on to Achilles, and so as well stretch an ancient story to modern readers.
➡️I think the main characters were explored immensely, but I still love Circe more, which was published almost a decade after this book - the improvement on character devt was worth noting.
✨REFLECTIONS
➡️Stories mirror realities, and this retelling of an old story gives window to the old world - the world before it was christianized, the times when homosexuality and homosexual relationships weren’t yet demonized by religion.
➡️I’m lucky I live in my time. The women then had no right to live their ways, no right against servitude. By day, they scrub the floors and keep the kitchen, by night, they’re prostitutes to soldiers. The culture was just bonkers🥺
➡️Nothing torn me more than the last few pages of the last chapter: 'the goddess, the mortal, and the boy who was both’. I felt the immeasurable grief, the endless pain of an immortal mother for her child’s death, and the depth of longing that robes a lost soul in finding his way to his greatest love.😢 - just right for a Feb novel 💞💕
(at Philippines)
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