by Pat Barker ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 3, 2024
More brilliant work from one of world literature’s greatest writers.
The third volume in Barker’s Trojan War series moves to Mycenae for a bloody climax.
Briseis, the enslaved Trojan princess who narrated the fall of Troy and ensuing wait for the Greeks to sail home in The Silence of the Girls (2018) and The Women of Troy (2021), is replaced here by Ritsa, a fellow Trojan who was her close friend. Ritsa is charged with babysitting Cassandra, daughter of the fallen King Priam, who is now enslaved to victorious Greek commander Agamemnon and proclaims that they will be killed in Mycenae. Indeed, readers soon meet Clytemnestra—in close third-person chapters alternating with Ritsa’s slave’s-eye first person—who is plotting to revenge herself on Agamemnon for his sacrifice of their daughter, Iphigenia. But Ritsa’s master, Machaon, dismisses this idea: “Frightened? Of his wife?...She’ll jump if he tells her to.” Ritsa, as punchy a narrator as Briseis, voices the feminist critique central to all three novels in response. “Pure reflex that, an automatic assertion of the rights of men.” Barker’s use of blunt British vernacular to revive this ancient Greek tale remains as effective as ever. Her latest volume adds a new note to its predecessors’ grim catalogues of brutalities. It’s decidedly creepy; the palace rustles with the voices of invisible children who leave handprints and footprints that keep reappearing no matter how often they’re scrubbed off. They are the children Agamemnon’s father, Atreus, murdered and served in a pie to their father, his brother. But they are also “all the other little boys hurled to their deaths, the babies tossed into the air and caught on spears while their mothers were made to watch” as the victorious Greeks overran fallen Troy. Barker’s vision of a world shaped by violence, a key theme in all her fiction, is equal to the tragic grandeur of ancient myth, and her insistence that ordinary people’s sufferings be given equal weight with the woes of the mighty gives it a contemporary edge.
More brilliant work from one of world literature’s greatest writers.Pub Date: Dec. 3, 2024
ISBN: 9780385549110
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Doubleday
Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2024
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by Ken Follett ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 23, 2025
Vintage Follett. His fans will be pleased.
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New York Times Bestseller
A dramatic, complex imagining of the origins of Stonehenge.
In about 2500 B.C.E. on the Great Plain, Seft and his family collect flints in a mine. He dislikes the work, and the motherless lad hates the abuse he gets from his father and brothers. He leaves them and arrives at a wooden monument where sacred events such as the Midsummer Rite take place. There are also circles of stones that help predict equinoxes, solstices, even eclipses. This is a world where the customary greeting is “May the Sun God smile on you,” and everyone is a year older on Midsummer Day. Except for a priestess or two, no one can count beyond fingers and toes—to indicate 30, they show both hands, point to both feet, then show both hands again. Casual sex is common, and sex between women is less common but not taboo. Joia, a young woman who becomes a priestess, wonders about her sexuality. After a fire destroys the Monument, she leads a bold effort to rebuild it in stone. To please the gods, they must haul 10 giant stones from distant Stony Valley. Of course neither machinery nor roads exist, so the difficulties are extraordinary. Although the project has its detractors, hundreds of able-bodied people are willing to help. Craftspeople known as cleverhands construct a sled and a road, and they make the rope to wrap around the stones. Many, many others pull. And pull. Meanwhile, the three principal groups—farmers, woodlanders, and herders—all have their separate interests. There is talk of war, which Joia has never seen in her lifetime. Soon it seems inevitable that the powerful farmers will not only start one but win it, unless heroes like Seft and Joia can come up with a creative plan. But there is also the matter of love for Joia in this well-plotted and well-told yarn. The story has a lot of characters from multiple tribes, and they can be hard to keep track of. A page in the front of the book listing who’s who would be helpful.
Vintage Follett. His fans will be pleased.Pub Date: Sept. 23, 2025
ISBN: 9781538772775
Page Count: 704
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Review Posted Online: July 4, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2025
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by Lily King ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 7, 2025
That college love affair you never got over? Come wallow in this gorgeous version of it.
A love triangle among young literati has a long and complicated aftermath.
King’s narrator doesn’t reveal her name until the very last page, but Sam and Yash, the brainy stars of her 17th-century literature class, call her Jordan. Actually, at first they refer to her as Daisy, for Daisy Buchanan of The Great Gatsby, but when they learn she came to their unnamed college on a golf scholarship, they change it to Jordan for Gatsby’s golfer friend. The boys are housesitting for a professor who’s spending a year at Oxford, living in a cozy, book-filled Victorian Jordan visits for the first time after watching The Deer Hunter at the student union on her first date with Sam. As their relationship proceeds, Jordan is practically living at the house herself, trying hard not to notice that she’s actually in love with Yash. A Baptist, Sam has an everything-but policy about sex that only increases the tension. The title of the book refers to a nickname for the king of hearts from an obscure card game the three of them play called Sir Hincomb Funnibuster, and both the game and variations on the moniker recur as the novel spins through and past Jordan’s senior year, then decades into the future. King is a genius at writing love stories—including Euphoria (2014), which won the Kirkus Prize—and her mostly sunny version of the campus novel is an enjoyable alternative to the current vogue for dark academia. Tragedies are on the way, though, as we know they must be, since nothing gold can stay and these darn fictional characters seem to make the same kinds of stupid mistakes that real people do. Tenderhearted readers will soak the pages of the last chapter with tears.
That college love affair you never got over? Come wallow in this gorgeous version of it.Pub Date: Oct. 7, 2025
ISBN: 9780802165176
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Grove
Review Posted Online: July 4, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2025
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