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A “darkly fascinating, raw, and breathtaking” listen (Jennifer Saint, author of Ariadne): While her husband, Odysseus, is away at war, Penelope uses her wits and wiles to keep the peace in Ithaca. “A crackling tale of secrets and intrigue” (Kirkus Reviews) that M.R. Carey calls “unique, wonderful, and urgently contemporary.”
Audible Audio
First published September 6, 2022
"How do you hide an army?"
"Medon," Penelope tuts, "what a foolish question. You hide them in precisely the same way you hide your success as a merchant, your skill with agriculture, your wisdom at politics and your innate cutting wit. You hide them as women."
[A]ll the war, all the rage and hurt and loss and pain - had been for nothing. For what? For a single night of flame and a few kings taking the spoils? When the sun rose over the ashes of her city, the soldiers of Greece were still hurt, still bloody, still lost, only now there were no stories left, no poets to tell them that they were heroes. So instead they became beasts performing sacrilege upon the living and the dead, for their fathers had taught them no other way to be a man than to howl at the crimson sun.