Meer dan een miljoen boeken binnen handbereik!
Bookbot

Theseus

Deze epische saga brengt oude mythen tot leven met opmerkelijk realisme en psychologische diepgang. Het volgt de levensreis van een legendarische held, van zijn onzekere jeugd tot zijn meest gevierde daden. De serie combineert meesterlijk historische settings met fantastische elementen, en onderzoekt de menselijkheid die schuilgaat achter de mythische figuur. Het is een meeslepend verhaal over moed, intrige en de zoektocht naar identiteit in een wereld van goden en stervelingen.

The Bull from the Sea
The King Must Die

Aanbevolen leesvolgorde

  1. 2

    "The Bull from the Sea" is the story of Theseus, King of Athens, but also Mary Renault's brilliant historical reconstruction of ancient Greek politics. Throughout his reign, Theseus is torn between his genius for kingship and his truant craving for adventure. As Theseus for a dynastic marriage with Phaedra, Pirithoos, the pirate prince, lures him off to explore the unknown Euxine, where he meets and captures the young warrior priestess Hippolyta. She is the love of his life, and that love is the crux of his fate. The bull of Marathon, the battle of the Lapiths and Kentaurs, and the moon-goddess cult of Pontos are merely a portion of the legendary material that Renault weaves into the fabric of great historical fiction. Whether or not these myths have their far-distant origin in actual events, the author's imagination and scholarship have invested them with immediate amd magical reality.

    The Bull from the Sea
  • In this ambitious, ingenious narrative, celebrated historical novelist Mary Renault take legendary hero Theseus and spins his myth into a fast-paced and exciting story. Renault starts with Theseus' early years, showing how the mystery of his father's identity and his small stature breed the insecurities that spur his youthful hijinx. As he moves on to Eleusis, Athens, and Crete, his playfulness and fondness for pranks matures into the courage to attempt singular heroic feats, the gallantry and leadership he was known for on the battlefield, and the bold-hearted ingenuity he shows in navigating the labyrinth and slaying the Minotaur. In what is perhaps the most inventive of all her novels of Ancient Greece, Renault casts Theseus in a surprisingly original pose; she teases the flawed human out of the bronze hero, and draws the plausible out of the fantastic.

    The King Must Die