Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow: A Novel (Troy Trilogy)

Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow: A Novel (Troy Trilogy)
Troy Lord of the Silver Bow A Novel - Troy Trilogy
Author: David Gemmell
He is a man of many names. Some call him the Golden One; others, the Lord of the Silver Bow. To the Dardanians, he is Prince Aeneas. But to his friends, he is Helikaon. Strong, fast, quick of mind, he is a bold warrior, hated by his enemies, feared even by his Trojan allies. For there is a darkness at the heart of the Golden One, a savagery that...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780345494573
ISBN-10: 0345494571
Publication Date: 10/31/2006
Pages: 496
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 9

4.2 stars, based on 9 ratings
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

mreneerouser avatar reviewed Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow: A Novel (Troy Trilogy) on + 127 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
So I asked for a recommendation on Goodreads for a historical fiction book that had court politics, backstabbing, and violence (you know all the stuff you are not supposed to love in a book) and I received a ton of great recommendations but I ended up finding the perfect book all by myself! At the time, I didn't even know I was holding this gem!

The cover-

First, the cover- it looks like it is some military history book. It's not. Sure, some military stuff is in there but it's not the focus.

2nd, the cover makes it look like it is a "guy" book. It's not. It has romance in there, in fact, there is not one, but two developing romances in this book (not a menage for you erotica thinking peeps but two separate romances one involving Helikaon and Andromache and another involving a minor character and a princess- slight spoiler and I don't want to give it away).

The characters-

The author was brilliant. It is sad that he passed away before his time because I would be stalking his updates to see when he was going to be writing the next book. The author created characters that absolutely came to life on the pages. I was outraged when he made the Helikaon do something that involved savagery and revenge since I came to love Helikaon's kindness and loyalty. But that was what was so great, the author made imperfect characters so perfectly! Helikaon, through his greatness and his imperfections, became so real and I loved him and the book even more for that reason!

The minor characters were not even close to minor. They played such an important part in the story. They were all so wonderfully developed. The best part of the story, you think you know which character to trust but then when you are in their POV, suddenly you aren't so sure. Throughout this book, the bad guys become good, and the good guys become bad. But sometimes, the good stay good so you never know!

The story-

Oh my god. What a wonderful book about trust, friendship, loyalty, and courage. What a wonderful action, military, romance, fantasy, and historical adventure.

I could go on but I think I've made my point.

One of my favorite books of 2011- maybe that should explain how much I loved this book!!!!

Update- I forgot to mention- the battle scenes were so incredible that near the end, I had to keep putting the book down since my heart was pounding so much. I also cried when two wonderful characters died. I mean I boohooed like a baby! So, if I've scared you manly men into thinking this is a flowery girl book, it isn't by far! It has enough of everything to keep all readers happy!
Read All 2 Book Reviews of "Troy Lord of the Silver Bow A Novel Troy Trilogy"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

gaslight avatar reviewed Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow: A Novel (Troy Trilogy) on + 145 more book reviews
A interesting re-imagining of the lead-up to the Trojan War, almost a complete alternate universe at points. However, I didn't find it an absorbing read. It had way more potential than it actually delivered.

The main character is the uninteresting Helikaon/Aeneas, sort of a mash-up between Aeneas & Achilles in valor and temperament. He's a driven man of contradictions, vengeful one moment and spouting mission statements of diversity/gender equity workshops the next. Such sentiments were clunky and phrased with too modern a tone.

Andromache here is a beautiful swan who thinks she's an ugly duck, accomplished in seducing women and handing advanced archery weaponry. There was little in her characterization that was surprising once I got a sense of the author's sentiment and aims. For all her powers, mental and physical, she wasn't interesting at all. Her and Helikaon's immediate attraction had no depth, but simply a device that yarned the gods into it and seemed to make it a matter of destiny that required no discussion or attention. Things happen, people are. Let's move on to the next scene.

The characters, with the exception of Odysseus (fail-proof), Laodike and Argurios, were flat and dull. There was no engaging internal activity, no brain- and soul-digging, no spark that made me care about them.

What "insight" there was consisted of the repetitious -- and eventually boring -- device of flashbacks within scenes whenever a character saw or said something that prompted a memory. It didn't even have to be important for DG to slip into another paragraph or 3 of pluperfect. For example, the Mykene mercenary Argurios polishes his armor for a feast, sees the dings on it, and recalls the battle where the damage occurred. There is no new information to be gained by this. The reader has already been informed often and at great length by a dozen characters what a great and fearless warrior he is.

DG may be considered a master of plot, but the book read like chess pieces moved with checkers prose. I'd say 95% of the book has a style that's simplistic like woah. Only a couple passages with Laodike & Queen Halysia prompted me to re-read them because they were so evocative of their inner turmoil (a rare occurrence elsewhere with other characters). Both women weren't the fantastically gifted warrior priestess/princess that Andromache was, and hence seemed more realistic and accessible.

There are several flagged "Aha!" moments of dual identities revealed where we discover that two different characters are actually one and the same, but after the first, the second and the third seem like a dull repeat of the same ploy and further plot twists had already been telegraphed far in advance.

In the end, there was too much I found impossible to ignore and "just enjoy it" for what it was. DG seemed to be too intent on reinventing some characters for newness's sake, going to the extent of having Paris be stoop-shouldered (!), bookish (!!) and balding (!!!), as well has having Helen be thickset, plain and unremarkable. Come on! If an author is going to reinvent the wheel in terms of Paris and Helen, then utilize them sensibly since so much of the action took place in Troy anyway. By dropping these new images for a brief glimpse but no commitment, it came across as a cheap trick.

After all this, why still 3 stars? Well, I appreciate re-imaginings of known universes. DG's Odysseus is very in-character with the new twist of The Odyssey being an anthology of his fireside tales. I enjoyed the meshing of Hector's battle exploits with the Hittite-Egyptian Battle of Kadesh, along with the political and martial relationship between Troy and the Hittite empire. (The utter absence of Hector was disappointing, however.)

Overall, a great disappointment, but at least I know what to expect and am prepared to be underwhelmed by the next two books.


Genres: