Goddess of yesterday by caroline b cooney

goddess%20of%20yesterday%20by%20caroline%20b%20cooney

goddess of yesterday by caroline b cooney goddess of yesterday by caroline b cooney goddess of yesterday by caroline b cooney


The full horrors of war and the brutality of even the noblest of lives in ancient Greece (although the land now known as Greece was many independent principalities then) are related in Anaxandra’s perceptive voice, in a heightened language that seems natural for her. The gods and goddesses are very real to Anaxandra, whose prayers and beseeching are answered only occasionally. When the besotted Trojan prince Paris takes Helen off to Troy, Anaxandra assumes another identity, to protect her own life and that of Helen’s youngest child. In Cooney’s telling, Helen is an exquisite monster: so beautiful that people die for her but cold, careless, and utterly self-involved. It is there that the girl, now 12, accomplished with a slingshot, and resourceful in many ways, meets Menelaus’s queen, Helen. When that island is sacked, Anaxandra alone is left alive and she pretends to be Callisto in the eyes of Menelaus, who takes her back to Sparta. She becomes the companion of the crippled princess Callisto of Siphnos. Anaxandra’s adventures begin as a small child, when she is taken hostage from her father, the king of a tiny unnamed island in the Aegean Sea.



goddess%20of%20yesterday%20by%20caroline%20b%20cooney