The long siege of Troy, the battles fought over it, and the city's
eventual capitulation and incineration are events which have often been
retold since their first recitation by Homer. Seldom, however, will they
have been narrated with such close attention to the minute particulars
of battle, to its reek and terror and pain, as in this startling account
by Daniel Kelly. Kelly looks minutely at every detail of archaic combat,
as well as at the lives and feelings shaped by it. His Troy is not only
a scene of shining glory, but also a grimy struggle for survival and
mastery. And he introduces surprising questions: what if not everything
in the Trojan war came to pass just as Homer tells us? What if the
future of the Roman empire were hidden in the burning ashes of Troy's -
and not in the way we might expect?