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Sto caricando le informazioni... Gli dei abbandonano Atenedi Stephanie Plowman
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)823.91Literature English English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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" 'Why have you come to Sardis, Lycius?'
Night after night this happens and I cannot answer them. All I can be sure of is when my journey here began--a night in early spring thirty years ago, when Thebes set her army tramping seven miles through the mud in a surprise attack on Plataea, so setting me, with many others, on the first stage of the long road which was to bring me here to Sardis."
Thus begin the thoughts of Lycius and his narration, from the start of the Peloponnesian War when he is a six-year old, through the progress of the war, his fighting at Syracuse and at Goat Rivers, both devastating defeats for Athens. His actions after the war and advice of friends and family influence his final decision.
On the whole, I was gripped by this book from the first page of the prologue; but I found it helps to know a little about this period in history. When it was written 50 years ago, I would guess people had more of a grounding in classical history than they do today. I found it more enjoyable on rereading [I read it twice in order to review it.] Some of the famous historical figures of that period were prominent--Alcibiades, his duplicitous cousin; Euripides, whose plays were often suitably quoted at certain points in the narrative; and Thucydides, the general/historian, among others. In history, Lycius himself was a cavalry officer in Xenophon's army, mentioned in Book 4 of Xenophon's Anabasis 1-4. I don't consider this novel difficult reading although somewhat dated. I do regret any negative over-the-top stereotypes the author used: mostly the Spartan characters. The only one half-way decent was the old king, Archidamos.
Recommended. ( )