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The Trojan Horse: How the Greeks Won the War

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Illus. in full color. "An ancient history lesson emerges from this account of the way the Greeks tricked the Trojans and rescued Helen of Troy. The book is well tailored to younger readers with careful explanations and short sentences; a pronunciation guide is appended. Drawings portray the story's main events. A nice supplement to units on ancient Greece or mythology."-- Booklist.  

48 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 1988

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382 people want to read

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Emily Little

22 books4 followers

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5 stars
212 (43%)
4 stars
159 (32%)
3 stars
96 (19%)
2 stars
18 (3%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 53 reviews
Profile Image for Jordan.
Author 5 books114 followers
February 28, 2015
My parents bought me this book when I was very young and I've happily bought copies first for my nephew and now for my daughter. It's a simple, spare account of the Trojan War focusing on the causes of the war and the end of the war itself.

The Trojan Horse introduces a handful of the Iliad's cast--Odysseus, Menelaus, Helen, Priam--but omits stories like that of Achilles and Hector. It also includes a lot of archaeological information, making this a hybrid of archaeology and Homer. The final chapter briefly describes the rediscovery of Troy by the 19th century archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann, a chapter that excited me as a child about the reality of history and the fact that much of it still out there somewhere, waiting for us beneath the dust.

Perhaps my favorite part of the book is the illustrations. These excited me even before I could handle reading the story on my own. They're detailed, dynamic, and powerfully evocative of the world created by the story.

With names like Agamemnon floating through the story, The Trojan Horse may be best suited as a transitional text for kids learning to read with a parent's help. With such good illustrations, it also works as a picture book you can read to a preliterate child. I recommend it heartily for anyone with a child showing an early love for history and myth.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Sue.
1,698 reviews1 follower
November 24, 2018
This was great. I kinda knew what this was all about, but the book explains it all--quick, simple and to-the-point. Pleasure to read this. Cut out all the stuff we don't need.
Profile Image for Leah Jay.
102 reviews27 followers
October 13, 2015
Great way to introduce children to the Trojan war and all it's glory. I know I would have understood The Iliad a LOT better if I had read this earlier in life. Easy to read and to understand!
Profile Image for Karen.
Author 10 books30 followers
May 28, 2016
This book simply, but thoroughly, tells the story of the Greek and Trojan War. Since I didn't learn about the Greek and Trojan War until I was twelve and was studying Latin, this book is MUCH easier for kids to read than what I read.

1 review
March 9, 2010
First book ever, so it gets 5.
Profile Image for Aimee Fuhrman.
Author 10 books8 followers
October 21, 2020
This is such a fabulous retelling of this classic story! It is a higher level Easy Reader (level 5, which equates approx. to grades 2-4 depending on your child's reading ability, though the book can easily be enjoyed by a wider age range), and Emily Little has done a fabulous job of condensing this oft confusing story into its essential parts. The story is written as history, omitting the mythological components (such as involvement by the gods), and the pictures by Michael Eagle help clarify the narrative.

I highly recommend adding this to any elementary or middle school study of Greek history, or use it to augment a child's passion for Greek culture and mythology. I give this book a G rating. To learn more about my parental rating system, visit my website SmudgedPages.net.
Profile Image for Nicholas Alexander.
75 reviews2 followers
November 25, 2024
A concise account of, as the subtitle says, 'how the Greeks won the war' with Troy. Written in story form with short chapters, the information left out and glossed over are just as potent as those focused on: the capture of Helen, the role of Achilles and his fight with Hector, Paris' role in both causing the conflict and killing Achilles etc. Nonetheless, it is an interesting look at the famous events, with a final chapter on Homer putting it all together 400 years later; and the finding of evidence that Troy actually existed by German Archeologist, Heinrich Schliemann, in 1870.
Profile Image for Margaret Chind.
3,212 reviews267 followers
March 13, 2020
My Rascal (5) loves this book. My Princess (8) who read it aloud said it was alright. They all want to watch the movie now and hear more about Achilles. This reader is a good challenge for her at this level. Great with a vocabulary at the end to challenging Greek names and cultural works. We own a copy of this. It was probably a Veritas Press NTGR recommendation. The illustrations are okay.
1 review
October 26, 2022
Well-written

I thought the book was well-written. I think history should be taught geographically, and this book helped me picture see where exactly the Trojan War took place. I don’t think kids in elementary school should just be reading fantasy kinds of books. They should be learning about world history and science at a young age with age appropriate reading skill levels.
3 reviews
January 22, 2024
I wish I could rate this 10 stars because it was just so fun. It was fun and I wish the book would go on forever. I liked it because it was about a really cool way of winning the war. I liked it so so much. The second the book arrived in the mail, I started reading it and finished in one day. I have read it 2 times already. -Grant age 7
Profile Image for Holly.
120 reviews17 followers
November 16, 2017
This is a good, short telling of the Trojan War. I used it in conjunction with our history lesson of the Trojan Horse. It’s not written with intricate details, but it’s not meant to. It merely adds a story-like account of the historical event.
239 reviews8 followers
September 21, 2018
I read this book a long time ago. The date finished is just a vague guess. The book gets five stars because I read it several times, and the story really stuck with me. Great for elementary school ages.
Profile Image for Anthony.
7,256 reviews31 followers
February 6, 2019
A tale of how the Greeks used subterfuge, and cunning to defeat the Trojans, and burn down the city of Troy to end the ten year war between the two armies. 400 years later his war was depicted in a poem known as the Iliad by the Greek poet named Homer.
Profile Image for Sandy.
1,539 reviews5 followers
Read
June 11, 2022
There is speculation over whether Helen of Troy was the cause of the Trojan War, but regardless of why the war was fought, the story of the Trojan Horse, is a great story to introduce to kids early. We loved this story as an early reader.
Profile Image for A N P.
59 reviews4 followers
January 12, 2018
Recommended history books for kids age 8-10 years old. With a clear illustration and easy words, kids will learn history about Troy War easily.
Profile Image for Kenneth Clayton.
258 reviews10 followers
May 19, 2018
Nice short introduction to homer for the very young. My 6 year old requested me read it to her and I didn’t pass up that opportunity.
Profile Image for Tracy.
29 reviews2 followers
December 28, 2020
This book was a great intro to Greek culture for my granddaughter's school. She was able to regurgitate what she read in great detail. Well written for children.
Profile Image for Aladdin Ch.
3 reviews
April 1, 2021
Very short. There wasn't enough details or thriller to make me dive into it. It is more like a summary than a book.
170 reviews
May 24, 2021
It was boring. Because it was about history
Profile Image for Heather.
723 reviews21 followers
March 3, 2023
I’ve never comprehended the story of the Trojan Horse… until now!
Profile Image for Hope Murray.
9 reviews
February 25, 2025
Good introduction for my 4th grader into the Trojan War and setting is up to read the works of Homer later in the week.
Profile Image for Koorihime-sama.
100 reviews
February 27, 2011
I OWN A SINGLE COPY.
BOUGHT AT AMAZON.COM.


Review/Rating:

2 out of 5

A simple retelling of the Trojan War and how the Greeks won this war. The city of Troy lives in wonder, with a stone wall protecting it, while the Greeks live on rocky land and can't grow wheat. In order to get wheat, they have to trade with Asia, but they get past the channel because Troy won't let them pass without paying the toll (gold). After the Trojans kidnap Helen, Menelaus' wife, the Greeks declare war on Troy. The war goes on for years, until the Greeks finally have a plan to defeat Troy, which involves a wooden horse.

It is so simple with the facts and there is no really interesting facts put into the book --- in order to make it more engaging. They pretty much had all the information that you should remember from school. And it feels longer than what the history books mention for the age group of this book. And from what I remember from that age, they mentioned the same information in the history book, but less pictures. Also, even though the illustrations seem to be pretty, there seems to be less than the previous Step Into Reading book I have read. They also look a little bit more bland than the Trail of Tears' illustrations.

I think it would be more interesting if I read it myself, but the purpose of the children's book is to have your children read it to you. However, you help them when they having trouble with a word or page or have questions. Basically, you need to definitely participate reading with them with this one because of the names, but I found it boring. It had too many details of the history for little kids, at least to me, and I would have liked it better if it was told more fictionalized. >.>" Also, go over the pronunciation guide with your child, which is at the book of the book, FIRST before having them read it since most of the words will be hard for them.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 53 reviews

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