Review: The Voyage Home by Pat Barker (Women of Troy #3)

My Five Word TL:DR Review: But Is this the conclusion?

I’ve loved reading Pat Barker’s imaginative retellings where the women of Troy are given a voice and opportunity to tell their story.  Seriously, this series is amazing.  I’m not sure if this is the final instalment, the title has the ring of a final book in series but if more books are forthcoming I’ll certainly be there for them.  This particular story brings to us three women, two of them well known in terms of Greek mythology, Cassandra, daughter of Priam and Clytemnestra, wife of Agamemnon.  In this retelling they are joined by a fictional character called Ritsa who serves as Cassandra’s body woman.

We begin the story with the voyage home where both women tread a fine line between pride and fear.  Cassandra, once a priestess, a prophet that no one pays any regard to and now the trophy wife of Agamemnon almost longs for the voyage to end.  She has foretold both her own and her husband’s death and whilst no one believes her she awaits her own end with no sense of dread, believing that for the prophecy to come true it must unfold in its entirety.  Her slave Ritsa, formerly a healer is an easy to like and down to earth woman.  She has known her own tragedy and it takes a while for her and Cassandra to strike a balance.  Clytemnestra has also patiently awaited her husband’s return.  She longs to avenge her daughter Iphigenia, sacrificed by her father to appease the Gods and gain a fair wind.

What I really enjoyed about this.

Once again the story is told in a very easy to access voice.  I think perhaps this instalment felt a little more modern than the previous two books although I could be misremembering, but the places are always easy to imagine and the characters are really well drawn with the minimum fuss.

If you know the story then clearly the author is working within certain restraints and being a Greek tragedy there’s no escaping the inevitable  What made this slightly different was giving us a fictional voice to allow glimpses into other aspects of the lives of these characters.  Ritsa, being the slave of Cassandra is given some agency to come and go, her movements not always as closely observed as the other two women and therefore showing us the life that everyday folk lived.  The herb gardens, the strange, rambling and disorientating palace, haunted by terrible deeds from the past, the claustrophobic ship that conveyed these women to Greece.

Agamemnon had no fear returning home, he resumed his role as King with swift ease, never once deferring to his wife, he assumed her subservience as his natural right and had no compunction about flaunting his young concubine.  At the end of the day his arrogance led him blindly to his own downfall, it never occurred to him to have any fear of his wife, a woman eaten by the need for revenge.

The other thing that really hit me whilst reading was this secret longing for a different ending, this strange and unrealistic hope that maybe things will end differently for these women.  It shows how the author draws you in and makes you form attachments, her storytelling is so good that you being to hope for something to change but at the same time you already know the outcome.

In conclusion this is an excellent series.  I’ve enjoyed all these retellings.  The writing is good, the author portrays the struggles and horror in such a way that there is no sensationalising of the brutality just a clear description of events that really bring home to you the cruelty and arrogance, the lack of feeling even, of some of these powerful men.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4.5 of 5 remarkably told tales stars

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Today I’m posting my Weekly Wrap Up and II’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s  Caffeinated Reviewer.  Without further ado:

Books read this week:

I’m still catching up but after this week, my reading has slowed down a little but I’m on track with my August review books.  This week I completed and reviewed Long Live Evil by Sarah Rees Brennan which I really enjoyed.   I also read a book that I was really looking forward to and unexpectedly was approved for a copy, The Voyage Home by Pat Barker.  I think this concludes the series and it was a good ending.  I’ve also made a good start on The Mercy of Gods by James SA Corey.  I’m about 50% into this one, it is a little bit slow in parts and it’s more hard sci fi than I was hoping for but I’m making good progress. In SPFBO news I’ve posted my first cuts which was a really difficult post to pull together and actually gave me a headache.  I really dislike this part of judging but it has to be done and I have more cuts which I’ll be posting next Saturday.

Next Week’s Reads:

  1. Tales of a Monstrous Heart by Jennifer Delaney
  2. Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate  Atkinson
  3. Long Live Evil by Sarah Rees Brennan

Outstanding Reviews

#SPFBO X: My First Five Cuts

SPFBOX

SPFBO X is now well underway and I have now completed reading at least the first 25% of the fifteen books I was allocated.  My co-judges (The Critiquing Chemist.) have also been making their way through their books and will be posting separately at some point in the near future.

For those who don’t know about SPFBO (the Self Published Fantasy Blog Off) – this is a competition created and run by Mark Lawrence.  The competition is now in its tenth year and you can find more about all the other entrants and judges over on Mark Lawrence’s blog

I separated my books into three batches which you can find here, here and here.  Having read the first 25% (at least) I’ve chosen five books that I intend to read further before choosing potential semi finalists to pass to the Critiquing Chemist to read.  The purpose of this post, which is the first of two such posts, is to make my first five cuts.  This isn’t a part of the competition that I enjoy but it is unavoidable.  So, without further ado, and in no particular order please find my first cuts below.  (My commiserations to the authors together with my utmost respect and appreciation for submitting your books into the competition).  

Messengers of Ilbeor by TJ Klapprodt

Messengersof

Messengers connect six races of the verdant and beautiful land of Ilbeor, and newly trained messenger Alanda feels the promise of her adult life as she steps into the world to find her fortune. Faithful dog Alis at her side, Alanda traverses the mountainous wilderness only to be punished by storm and sun before becoming the first elf-friend in generations. When she meets charming messenger Tostig and feels the spark of a connection unlike any she’s ever known, she believes her life has truly begun.

After being greeted by tragedy and a brother changed by primal magics she does not understand, Alanda must travel the icy wastes with an unlikely companion to discover the answers to her brother’s prophetic gifts and her own heritage. With only a mysterious artifact to guide her way, she knows only one thing: her entire destiny is about to change. In Tostig’s attempt to race to her side, he is waylaid by the mysterious Sashu toward his own changed future as powerful magician and a hand of the gods themselves.

As Alanda and Tostig uncover who they were fated to be, they learn the appearance of peace in Ilbeor is only given by the lack of outright war…and when they each come to the attention of vengeful elven mage Altoneir, they stand to find out just how much they have to lose.

My Thoughts (read 27%)

As the story begins we meet Alanda, a newly trained Messenger about to undertake her first assignment.  Accompanied by her dog Alis she sets off on her first solo adventure.  

During these early chapters Alanda goes through quite a lot.  Becoming very ill, rescued by elf healers and eventually declared a friend to elves before returning home and meeting a possible love interest along the way.  Unfortunately disaster is about to strike, Alanda’s family are struck down by illness and her family home burned to avoid contagion.

I found this easy to read, it’s a very clean story in that there’s no cursing or other content that would be inappropriate for younger readers (during the chapters I read at least), and in fact there’s a ‘gateway into fantasy’ feel about the story.  I wouldn’t say that it worked totally for me or more to the point it didn’t stand out at this stage.  The writing, although easy to get along with is a little overly descriptive at times and I didn’t find myself becoming attached to the central character.  Even though Alanda undoubtedly suffers during these early chapters I didn’t feel any real sense of impending danger or tension as any real issues or moments that should have felt devastating felt too quickly dealt with.  

That being said, I certainly didn’t struggle with the story up to the point I broke off.

Verdict: Cut

 

The Fate Of by JE Lynn

TFO

Evangeline is a cleric at the Church of Stars – an institution dedicated to healing and taking care of the people of Lovern amid a mysterious plague. After being warned that there is a cult infiltrating her beloved home, she starts her investigation. She aims to uncover the truth of who they are and what they want while maintaining her secretive relationship with her childhood friend.

Dianthus, memoryless and with nowhere else to go, has been living with the city’s royal family ever since they awoke five months ago, found confused and delirious by the youngest prince. They’ve become accustomed to the family’s lavish lifestyle, ignoring the burden of discovering their past identity in favor of the comfort they offer, but as the days move forward and a courtship with the crown prince begins, they start to find that they can only turn away from themselves for so long.

Harr is a wayward assassin who recently joined a strange circle of collaborators pursuing immortality. Haunted by the memories of her past and profession, she works to find the key to living forever while trying not to lose her head in the process.

The Fate of is the first novel in a seven book series set in a dark fantasy world with inspiration taken from the cosmic horror and gothic genres. It follows three protagonists as they slowly uncover parts of a larger conspiracy that threatens the peace of their city but none of that will matter if they can’t overcome themselves.

My Thoughts (read 26%)

The story follows three characters.  Eva is a cleric in the Church of Stars.  As the story begins she is predominantly involved in the care of patients who have fallen to a sickness that has already taken many lives.  She is frustrated by the lack of knowledge concerning the disease and the shortage of supplies to treat patients.  Eva has a secret relationship with the Archbishop that places both of them in a difficult position.  Dianthus, a person found in the city with no memory and given shelter by the royal family and a potential budding relationship with one of the princes.  Harr is an assassin who becomes interested in dark dealings with the ultimate goal of immortality.

I’m not entirely sure how many pages this book has (Amazon suggests approximately 470) which if that is the case, I would have expected to be a lot more invested in the story and characters by the time I reached my cut off point.  I think there is a lot of promise in terms of the plot but I found myself with constant niggles that simply held me back or frustrated me a little.  I’m not going to elaborate here because it’s quite possible that these issues are expanded upon as the story evolves.  I do think there could be some cuts made here and there to make the text a bit more punchy, I am intrigued about some of the plot elements but at this point the story hasn’t quite worked it’s magic on me.

Verdict : Cut

 

Woodspell by CR Collins

Woodspell

Humanity’s time has run out.

She’ll never be a victim again, but Rowena’s new power could destroy her country.

WOODSPELL is Volume 1 in the completed trilogy, TALES OF ARDONNA: WOODSPELL SERIES, a fairy tale for adults.

My Thoughts (read 21%)

Rowena is escaping from her life with the help of her brother.  Unfortunately they become separated and Rowena is left to fend for herself with only the forest to help.  She develops an affinity for the trees before eventually coming across the nearest town where she makes new friends.  

To be honest I struggled with this one a little and simply don’t think it’s the right fit for me which isn’t to say that others won’t love it of course.  It has an interesting blend of what seems to be modern and magical but I had difficulty really sinking into the story.  And, although I was intrigued by the trees and their connection to Rowena – I wouldn’t say I was convinced about why that connection was so strong to the point I read up to.

Verdict : Cut

 

The Erstwhile Tyler Kyle by Steve Hugh Westenra

Tyler Kyle doesn’t believe in monsters.

A washed-up thirty-year-old actor and reluctant cryptid investigator, Tyler is used to playing the Scully to his best friend Josh’s Mulder on their stupidly popular YouTube channel. But when Tyler receives previously unseen footage of the B movie bombshell mother who abandoned him eighteen years ago—footage linked to an isolated island in the Canadian wilderness—the mystery is one conspiracy he’s determined to investigate. The fact that following the scent gives Tyler an excuse to run away from the “straight” Josh, whom he drunkenly made out with, is just the cherry on the shit sundae.

But Echo Island isn’t what it seems. Its eerily scenic veneer hides a twisted secret buried in its roots as a gay conversion camp, and as Tyler retraces his mother’s footsteps, he discovers a supernatural connection between the residents and the island—one they seem to think Tyler and his mother share.

Even worse, the footage of Tyler’s mom came from someone on the island–a stalker whose obsessive fascination with both Tyler and Josh is about to make Tyler wish he hadn’t gone this one alone. Puppeteered by his stalker, searching for his mother, and debating whether it’s possible to queerbait yourself, Tyler comes to realize that it doesn’t matter so much whether you believe in monsters, if they believe in you.

My Thoughts (read 29%)

Well, I was intrigued enough by this book to continue reading further than expected.  This is a book about a young man, Tyler, who has gone in search of the mother who abandoned him as a boy.  His search takes him to a very unusual island where it seems he has more questions than answers.

I like the premise for this, I also think the writing was good although I think Tyler tries a little too hard sometimes to be amusing and it almost becomes tiring at times.  It also feels like one of those books that is going to be elusive, I already feel like both Tyler and I are chasing answers and it doesn’t really feel that they’re going to be forthcoming.

This was a quirky read to where I broke off.  Some of the descriptions are really good and make the place easy to envisage.  I think I would have liked more ‘investigating’ than I felt was present by this (almost) first third of the book, and also, at the point I put the book down any real fantasy elements were absent – although there is mention of strange beasts in the forest (that are meant to be bears but clearly are something more horrific). 

I certainly didn’t dislike this but I would have liked it to move along a little faster than it did.

Verdict : Cut

 

Sidetracked by SK Kelley

Jayde Palmer considers herself a typical college student, but life is messy.

The day before her 19th birthday, a chance meeting with a beautiful young man named Ice Monroe disrupts Jayde’s plans for a quiet, relaxing summer. She assumes he’s too good to be true—until he calls. Jayde takes the bait, and things go well at first, but the relationship takes a bizarre turn when Ice drops a bombshell secret:

He is a magical human-feline shapeshifter, known as an immortal.

As Jayde comes to terms with the existence of immortals and struggles to work out Ice’s true intentions in dating her, a series of unexpected and uncomfortable encounters with a figure from his past leave Jayde increasingly unsure who she can trust or what she should do next.

Even so, it’s clear that something is wrong, and she may have no choice but to act on instinct.

Sidetracked is part one of a four-part series about dark secrets, difficult decisions, strange dreams, a secret government program, and mental illness.

With cats and a little bit of magic!

My Thoughts (read 25%)

Sidetracked was fairly easy to read at the point I read up to.  It feels like it’s going to go down the paranormal romance route although at the point I stopped reading I wouldn’t say there was any romance involved.  We meet Jayde Palmer.  A student who just turned 19.  Whilst shopping for groceries one day she meets the hottest boy ever who takes her phone number and eventually gets in touch to organise a date. 

I don’t quite know where this story is headed at the moment but my immediate thoughts.  This reads like fanfic with definite Twilight vibes (although I’d say more 50 Shades vibes tbh).  Jayde is incredibly naive, she never questions anything, even though there are little red flags popping up already.  Ice – the love interest – seems very cool towards her, I’m not quite certain what his interest is but before you can blink he’s revealing his secrets about shapeshifting to her and getting her to sign nondisclosure agreements.  I think my issue with this book is that it felt too familiar, although I’m not sure what direction the story will eventually take so there could be surprises in store.

Verdict: Cut

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday Face Off: Strange Beasts by Susan J Morris

FFO

Today I’m returning to the  Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy).  I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner.  This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers.  Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite.  If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.

This week I’ve chosen a book that  I haven’t read yet but will be a forthcoming read, due out in October.  Strange Beasts by Susan J Morris.  Here are the covers:

My favourite this week:

Which is your favourite?

Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.

Review: Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate Atkinson

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Fantastic Characters meet Murder Mystery

Kate Atkinson is an author that I really like, I haven’t actually read all her Brodie books but did read the first few pre blogging and enjoyed them and so couldn’t resist the description for this one.

This story brings to us a range of quirky and eccentric characters, a murder that takes place in a manor house whilst the lord of the manor is actually holding a murder mystery party.

There is some set up for this before we get to the murdering and sleuthing that takes place in and around the grounds of Burton Makepeace.  The story brings to us Jackson Brodie, an ex-cop turned private detective.  He’s taken a case about a stolen painting.  At the same time another case comes to his attention which seems to share very similar traits.  Could this be the same person.  Basically, Brodie enlists the help of a former colleague – who you could call his sidekick as he is usually one step ahead and the two start searching for clues.

Now, firstly, picking this up I thought we would fairly soon be ensconced at the cumbling manor house with a storm keeping the residents and guests hostage.  However, this isn’t quite the case, there is some detective work that takes place before hand and also an introduction to a number of the more standout characters  This is in no way a criticism as Atkinson is an absolute wonder at drawing her characters and giving you some fantastic favourites to plump for.  And, any patience you exercise beforehand will be well rewarded as the scenes at Burton Makepeace are so good.  There’s an almost comedic element to certain scenes and that coupled with the ever so quintessential British eccentricity of some of the characters makes this a really engaging read.

To be honest I don’t really want to say too much because of spoilers and the desire not to ruin the read for others.

What I will say is the writing is wonderful.  The pacing takes a little time to pick up but I think it’s worth the wait and the characters are really good.

I have to give a little shout out to the Dowager who absolutely stole the show for me.  Brodie and DC Reggie Chase make a fantastic team and you know that you’re enjoying a book when you seriously start to worry about any harm coming to the main characters.  Fortunately this is quite a cosy read although it wouldn’t be a murder mystery without any bodies now would it?

I had such a good time with this.  A murder mystery.  A positively Christie style guest list, the vicar, the Dowager, the Army Major, a pack of invited guests expecting a thrilling evening of murder mystery shenanigans, little expecting that a real murder has actually taken place, and a detective and his sidekick arriving to the party just in the nick of time.  Did I mention that there’s an escaped criminal on the loose and an intense storm that gives the proceedings a locked room feel?  Well, there you go then.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4.5 of 5 stars

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