The story:
“Arcadian Nights” is a collection of short stories, re-telling the Greek myths from the imagination of award-winning author John Spurling. Focusing of five key figures (Agamemnon, Apollo, Herakles, Perseus and Theseus), the stories range from matricide to Minotaurs, from grandfathers to Gorgons.
My thoughts:
John Spurling is a winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, and every story in this book is rich with detail and the author’s obvious love for the stories.
Greece, and the Greek myths, are clearly in the author’s blood, and the book is dedicated to his grandfather J.C. Stobart, author of “The Glory That Was Greece” (1911). I particularly enjoyed the fact that the author was remembering and writing his own versions of these stories from his home in Greece — in fact, in the Peloponnese, in Arcadia itself (both named after figures in Greek mythology — Pelops and Arcas). It must be wonderful to sit in a place that, as the author says “is at once both fiction and reality”.
As mentioned, the stories are very detailed and might be daunting to readers who aren’t well versed in the Greek myths. But I really enjoyed just going with the flow, and learning about connections between the characters I was less familiar with, along with enjoying the author’s versions of stories I did already know.
The book helpfully includes a glossary of names at the back, which is great if you lose track (although beware of minor spoilers if you’re not familiar with the myths — “X, son of Y and Z; went on to murder his mother”…!).
This was a really enjoyable book for me, and although I read it as one book, you could equally dip in and out of the individual stories.