Goatsong: A Novel of Ancient Athens

Tom Holt

Book 1 of Walled Orchard

Language: English

Publisher: St Martins Pr

Published: Jan 15, 1990

Description:

Written by the author of "Lucia in Wartime", "Lucia Triumphant", "Expecting Someone Taller" and "Whose Afraid of Beowulf?", this is an historical novel set in Greece. Eupolis of Pallene, playwright and satirist, offers new and wicked perspectives on the glory that was Greece.

From Publishers Weekly

Holt, whose fantasy, Expecting Someone Taller , earned fine reviews, now offers an impeccable historical novel about classical Athens as seen through the eyes of a comic playwright--Eupolis of Pallene. Born 38 years after the battle of Salamis established Athens as the preeminent Greek power, Eupolis spends his youth mainly in the company of his father's goats. From age nine onward, he warbles childish poems to these animals, and even writes a play called The Goats in honor of its chorus and first audience. When war breaks out between Sparta and Athens, however, the mood darkens; the great plague decimates Athens and orphans Eupolis. Yet in due course he develops a brilliant career as a comic poet, and gets to know luminaries of the era, including Aristophanes, Cleon and Socrates. Holt's view of one of Western history's greatest periods is hard-edged and debunking, although leavened with irony and a love story--that of Eupolis and his bad-tempered wife Phaedra. This engaging work is the first book in a series to be called The Walled Orchard.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Eupolis of Pallene, Athenian comic dramatist and rival of Aristophanes, reminiscences in this first volume of a trilogy. In his youth he often cared for his grandfather's goats and to amuse himself composed dramatic verse with the goats as protagonists. Eupolis's first efforts at staging a play are as disappointing as his often tumultuous marriage to Phaedra. Interspersed are stints with the military and improving his land. These frequent digressions tend to justify the narrator's expressed concern about holding the reader's interest. The style is chatty but engaging. Descriptions of the drama contests, contemporary figures, and customs are well drawn and informative. Consider where there is interest or where Holt's earlier novels ( Expecting Someone Taller) have been well received.
- Ellen Kaye Stoppel, Drake Univ. Law Lib., Des Moines
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.