Author:Barry Strauss
Did the Trojan War really happen?
Spectacular new archaeological evidence suggests that it did. Recent excavations and newly translated Hittite texts reveal that Troy was a large, wealthy city allied with the Hittite Empire. Located at the strategic entrance to the Dardanelles, the link between the Aegean and Black Sea, it was a tempting target for marauding Greeks, the Vikings of the Bronze Age. The Trojan War may have been the inevitable consequence of expanding Greek maritime commerce.
Written by a leading expert on ancient military history, the true story of the most famous battle in history is every bit as compelling as Homer's epic account - and confirms many of its details. In The Trojan War, master storyteller Barry Strauss puts legend into its historical context, without losing its poetry and grandeur.
Imaginative, sympathetic and plausible
—— Bettany HughesAn exciting tale written in a lively style that brings Homer's heroes and the world in which they lived to vibrant and colourful life
—— Donald KaganStrauss's brilliant interweaving of the mythic and the modern archaeological records makes for exhilarating [...] reading
—— The ScotsmanConsumed in one of those burning-the-midnight-oil situations... I really enjoyed it
—— Michael WoodA military epic of the first order, weaving together fact and fiction in a beguiling tapestry of blood, guts, gore - and terrible feminine beauty
—— Paul Cartledge, professor of Greek History, Cambridge UniversityThis is as good an account as we are likely to get of one of the most famous wars in history. A must-read for anyone interested in war, history, or ancient times
—— Max Boot, senior fellow in national security studies, The Council on Foreign RelationsIt has taken a mere 2,700 years for archaeology to reveal Homer as a truly talented historian, not just a peddler of second hand myths. Contrary to age-old academic prejudice, finds since 1988 have confirmed that the Trojan War happened much as Homer - the Iron Age writer with an inspired grasp of Bronze Age culture - related it. Homer's heroes remain mythical, but so much else is spot-on that Barry Strauss extends the benefit of the doubt by re-telling The Iliad in his own chattily lyrical style as if Achilles & Co were as real as the other proven evidence. Cracking book ...
—— The Daily TelegraphIn this gripping reconstruction [Strauss] deploys an impressive array of archaeological, historical and linguistic evidence...
—— Mail on SundayA gripping account
—— Adam Forrest , The HeraldDeGroot tells the story of the American lunar mission with verve and elegance
—— Richard Aldous , Irish TimesFascinating, gossipy and occasionally hilarious
—— Jeffrey Taylor , Express