The Trojan War threatens Troy’s allies and
the Greek supply raids spread. A young healing priestess, designated as future
queen, must defend her city against both divine anger and invading Greeks. She
finds strength in visions of a handsome warrior god. Will that be enough when
the half-immortal Achilles attacks? Hand
of Fire, a tale of resilience and hope, blends history and legend in the
untold story of Achilles’s famous captive, Briseis.
That’s
a quick introduction to my novel, Hand of
Fire. But how did I ever think of writing about this semi-mythological
woman, Briseis, whom we know about only from a few lines in the Iliad, an epic poem composed by Homer more
than 3,000 years ago?
It
may sound strange but I started Hand of
Fire to answer a question, and in the process I found such an engaging
young woman that I had to give her the voice Homer denied her—to let Briseis
tell her story.
For years I’d taught the Iliad, Homer’s poem of the Trojan War,
and kept wondering with my students how Briseis could possibly have loved
Achilles—which is what Homer shows us. The half-immortal Greek had killed her
husband and brothers, destroyed her city and turned her from princess to
slave—hardly a heartwarming courtship. She is central to the plot of the Iliad and yet she gets only a handful of
lines. In those few words, the one clear notion expressed is her sorrow at
being parted from Achilles.
I should say I always liked Achilles, the
existential hero who calls the whole war into question—which shows he’s no
brainwasher—so the answer wasn’t some ancient version of Stockholm Syndrome. I
wrote Hand of Fire to solve this
psychological puzzle.
I
also had to find a vivid, historical source to fill in the many gaps in
Briseis’s life story. Homer’s fragmentary bits weren’t enough. He tells us
simply that she was a princess of Lyrnessos, a city allied to Troy, and
Achilles destroyed that life. Who was she before Achilles came crashing in?
What kind of woman can stand up to this semi-divine, but immensely conflicted
man and hold onto her own sense of self, as she must have, to form a genuine
bond with him?
Judith Starkston
# # #
About the Author
Find an excerpt, Q&A, book reviews, ancient recipes, historical background as well as on-going information about the historical fiction community on her website www.JudithStarkston.com. Follow Judith on Facebook and Twitter @JudithStarkston and visit her on Goodreads Hand of Fire
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