Member Reviews
“So many people have left her; she felt as if there wasn’t enough of her to patch the holes they have left behind.”
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Daughters of Sparta is the myth retelling I was waiting for since Circe. The author has decided to leave the Gods outside the narration in order to make us perceive Klytemnestra and Helen as real girls, with real lives and real feelings.
Let’s start with Helen, I think there is no one who would say: Oh I like that girl. She is considered a whore who is only able to follow her desires without thinking of consequences. But here, in this tale, she is just a very lonely girl who doesn’t know how to speak with her husband and who is fascinated by a golden boy who promises her the world. Of course the reality is different, but how is she supposed to know that?! She only knows her very narrow reality and when she has the chance to be free, she just grabs it because she desperately wants to be happy and she thinks that’s the only way. Born from a rape, she has never received the love she deserved from her mother and she feels inadequate as a mother herself. She is afflicted by depression and the only person with whom she has ever felt a great attachment, her sister, is far away.
I must admit I have always liked Klytemnestra‘s story. She is obliged to leave her house and go living with a man who makes her feel small and makes her think the only way to be a good mother and a good woman is to stay silent. But when he takes the decision to kill their own daughter, how can she stay put? The grief is just too strong, but again the author does an incredible thing here. Klytemnestra doesn’t really kill Agamemnon because of her daughter, she understands that he must have grieved too (even if this is not an excuse), but she kills him because she has found out there is another kind of life she can live, a life where she is respected and listened to and she does not want to give up to it. Maybe it’s a bit extreme, but who would be able to return into a cage after experiencing freedom?
I really found the two daughters of Sparta so real, with the same desires and fears all the women have and it is a great hymn to feminism. All women shouldn’t be silent, they should express they desires and be put into the condition not to fear doing so!
Daughters of Sparta is that most wonderful of books - one that draws you in from the very first pages and won't let go of you until the end. I read it in just over a day. I didn't want to put it down.
The storytelling is engaging, the characters of Helen and her sister, beautifully sketched while everyone around them, apart from their mother, stays very much in the background. This is their story.
At times the reader will hate either or both of the sisters, at other times, the reader will understand their pain, their desire to be more than their birthright.
A beautifully evocative story that speaks of the loneliness of royal marriage, of the heavy, and life-threatening expectations placed on young women to become mothers, and you will be swept along by a tale you think you know but might not.
5 stars from me.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for my review copy.
An enjoyable retelling which humanises two women who have become cryptic mythological figures. An interesting interpretation of their stories.
Daughters of Sparta by Claire Heywood is an excellent historical fiction that takes some classic, albeit underwritten, female characters within Greek mythology and creates a new narrative allowing new voices to emerge.
I really enjoyed reading the perspectives of Helen and Klytemnestra. We get to see everything from their perspective as they grow up and the events in their lives, and the world as they see it, up until the events after the Trojan War.
This, to me, was more of a character-driven novel and that allowed for a slower, more complex and reflective pace. Learning their thoughts, hopes, dreams, opinions, and how society was for them in Sparta growing up, as well as thereafter, really enveloped me. I enjoyed the new perspective that was presented through their stories.
I really enjoyed this book and look forward to more from this author.
5/5 stars
Thank you NG and Hodder & Stoughton for this wonderful arc and in return I am submitting my unbiased and voluntary review and opinion.
I am posting this review to my GR and Bookbub accounts immediately and will post it to my Amazon, Instagram, and B&N accounts upon publication.
Dodgy formatting aside, I wish that Daughters of Sparta had a more fresh approach to distinguish itself by - it's facile to fly through, but its focal women fall a little flat and some of the takes on the mythology are a tad doubtful.
Thank you to Hodder & Stoughton for kindly passing on this ARC!
I requested this by accident and after contacting Netgalley, they didn't change my request status. I was approved around 2 weeks before the release date while I have requested it over 2-3 months ago... I won't be reading it for now. Rating does not reflect my opinion.
This was such an interesting story - I loved it. We are offering Classics at A Level once more and so I am really keen to have a lots of Greek mythology-inspired fiction available in the school library so that the pupils can really immerse themselves into the subject. Thank you for the opportunity to read this!
This is the story of Helen and Klytemnestra, their childhood in Sparta and their subsequent marriages. As a big fan of all Greek mythology-inspired fiction, I was very curious about this book. There is a lot of Greek mythology-inspired fiction on the market and I was wondering: what would make this one stand out? What spin would this book put on an (overly) familiar story? And would it be as good as the books of Madeline Miller, Natalie Haynes, Pat Barker, Marion Zimmer Bradley, etc.? Large shoes to fill.
It started a bit slow, and I didn't find the voices of Helen and Klytemnestra particularly distinctive. After Helen elopes with Paris however, the pacing picks up and I got really into this book. The writing was easily digestible, even though the stories are really emotional. So in the end, I liked it, and I'm glad I read it. In the Acknowledgements, Heywood explains that she wanted to tell the story in a historically accurate way, and, as a former historian, I looove that approach to fiction.
But other than that, it didn't really do anything more for me. I know these characters from the original texts and modern interpretations, so I had hoped to be left with a new take on them (or the story), but that didn't really happen. It's an amazing story, but we knew that already. So for me, this was not of the level of 'Circe' or 'A Thousand Ships' unfortunately.
I always loved the mythology of Ancient Greece and liked to read retellings. This book deals with the stories of Klytemnestra and Helen from their youth till after the Trojan War. It´s well written, and describes the life of women in a world of men and war, without self-determination. There is a certain development in their lives, but they can be any women, not those of the Iliad and the other Greek stories. A quick read though.
Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.