Rating: Not rated
Tags: Historical Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
Bova is best known as a prolific writer of works of
science fiction. Here he tries his hand at supposedly
historical fiction, with interesting, enjoyable, but uneven
results. Lukka, a Hittite warrior, returns to the Hittite capital
city to find it engulfed in civil war, his father murdered,
and his wife and two young sons taken away by slavers.
Along with a small cadre of soldiers under his command,
Lukka launches an epic search for his family, which leads
him to the gates of Troy as it is beseiged by the army of
Agamemnon. Bova then proceeds to an original retelling of the final
stages of the legendary Trojan War. In this account, Lukka
serves as a literary mirror, revealing the personalities of
some well-known characters, with a few surprising results.
Odysseus, predictably, is practical, crafty, and a natural
survivor in treacherous waters. Achilles is a born killer,
but he is shown as short and ugly, and his death is
decidedly unheroic. Helen is, of course, the babe of all
babes, but she is also petty and whiny.