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Last of the Amazons
 
 

Last of the Amazons (Paperback)

by Steven Pressfield (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 21.00
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

With an epic scope and keen sense of detail, Steven Pressfield has created an entertaining and vital reimagining of the Amazon legend with his historical novel, Last of the Amazons. Combining myth with history, Pressfield offers a conjectural account of the legendary female warrior tribe as it may have existed in the years leading up to its extinction. Following the Athenian-Amazon war in the fifth century B.C., Amazon warrior Selene is taken captive and placed as an unlikely governess to the two daughters of a high-ranking Greek. The three form a lasting bond, and when Selene eventually escapes to return to Amazonia, eldest daughter Europa follows her. The Athenians, including King Theseus, assemble a group to find them, eventually traveling to Amazonia. Here, those involved relate the story of the Amazon war to the men, and the book's action really begins. Narrators tell of Theseus's earlier voyage to Amazonia, where his weakened crew was given shelter by the Amazons; the love affair between Theseus and Amazon queen Antiope; and the terrible consequences of the queen's defection and the Amazonian invasion of Athens that it inspired.

Throughout, Pressfield instills Amazons with a grandiose sensibility, firmly modeling it after the Homeric epics of its time. Pressfield relishes in describing these events and their heroes with a divinely consequential spirit:

Antiope advanced…Clearly no few of the foe took her for a goddess, with such splendor did her armor gleam and by such brilliance did her aspect exceed the common measure of humanity. The hour was still early, the west-facing slope deep in shadow, so that the Amazon, seen from the besiegers’ lines, advanced from gloom into flares of blinding dazzle.

Some clumsy dialogue and clichéd interactions hamper the book’s emotional resonance, but the level of intricacy and constant action on display here keep the pages moving along. Amazon is ultimately an impressive, fun read that renders history spectacular in its speculation. --Ross Doll --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Writing about ancient Greece with rich historical detail, passion and drama, Pressfield has previously dramatized the battle of Thermopylae (Gates of Fire) and the Peloponnesian War (Tides of War). Here, he steps further back in time, to 1250 B.C., when the civilized Greek city-state of Athens confronts the barbaric empire of the Amazons in a titanic struggle for survival. The novel does not pack the emotional punch of Pressfield's other Greek fiction, but it still rings with the clamor and horror of close combat, sword on shield, battle-ax on helmet and javelins thudding into armor. The Amazon kingdom, peopled and ruled by a ferocious society of female warriors, occupies land near the Black Sea. The Amazon war queen, Antiope, leads an army of female warriors feared for their savage cruelty and hatred of the Greeks. When Theseus, the Greek king of Athens, journeys into Amazon territory, he and Antiope spar verbally, but fall in love, creating a dilemma for both. Antiope forswears her allegiance to the Amazon life and flees with Theseus back to Athens to become his wife. Antiope's successor, her Amazon lover, Eleuthera, vows to wipe out Athens to erase the shame and treachery of Antiope and Theseus's marriage. She leads a mighty invasion of Greece, culminating in a long siege and a climactic battle before Athens's great walls. Amid the carnage, gore and violence, Pressfield presents a love story so grand it pits nations against one another. Pressfield's javelin is his pen and he wields it well in this gruesome tale of ancient blood lust in an age when there is no word for mercy.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Last of the Amazons
46% buy the item featured on this page:
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Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing like it, Jun 14 2004
By Kate (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
I've never read one of Steven Pressfield's books before. I happened to pick this one up by accident as I was waiting to pick up my friend. And from that moment, I could not put it down. You become attached to the characters ... and invested in the Amazon way of life, cheering for their successes, and feeling loss in their defeats. This is one of those books that you do not want to end - but maybe that's also because with the end of the novel comes the end of the Amazons. I am in withdraw now, desperately searching for another work to fill the void.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Athens vs. Amazons, April 18 2004
By Vagabond77 (Tennessee, USA) - See all my reviews
"Last of the Amazons" is another Steven Pressfield novel set in ancient Greece, except this time it is in Greece from mythology. In it, two stories are told at the same time; one of a voyage to the Amazonian lands (modern day Slovic countries) to rescue a young girl who ran off with her Amazon slave/governess. Along the way, the older soldiers tell the story of the first Amazon war with Athens twenty years ago. That story takes up most of the book. There are a lot of secrets that are reveled in the last twenty or so pages that seemes a little over dramatic. And how the battle was conducted and fought seems more or less guess work since it takes place in myth and not history. The conflict basicly boils down to civility vs. savagry, democracy vs. anarchy. The Amazons are portraiyed like the Apaches from a John Ford movie; savage and lawless, but very passionate. All the trouble starts when King Thesus takes one of the Amazonian women as his wife. The Amazons march on Athens and try to destroy it and the royal family for the insult. It is alright, but it seems a bit long in the tooth, especilly in the battle scenes. But it's alright. The violence is very gory, especially the crucifixon of Sith enemies. All in all, Pressfeild's novels seems to be like a overly romantic version of the History Channel.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A good story, I enjoyed this book., April 16 2004
By Cory (USA) - See all my reviews
I really, really enjoyed this book. A lot of people say it isn't as good as some of his others, or so it seems, so I'll definitely have to check those out, this being my first Pressfield novel. I won't bother to summarize it; plenty of other reviews do that, and I'm not good at it.

At first, I found it hard to get into. I wasn't really sure where the story was going for a while - Bones' present? Her early life? I found the characters not too interesting to me during this first part, although after Selene runs away and Europa tells Bones she will follow, it really picked up.

Some people said they couldn't get into the characters. Bones - wasn't too interested. Damon - I loved him at some parts, but others...I just hated Theseus. But Selene, Antiope, Eleuthera - these were some of my favorites. I loved them because to me, they represented the tragedy of the Amazons and their lifestyle (at least judging by this book, and one other I've read - so I claim to be no expert on their culture, as it actually was - my whole experience of them is through fiction). Antiope, recognizing the future of her people. Eleuthera, determined to preserve it. Selene, the only Amazon to be caught so thoroughly between two worlds.

My favorite chapter was the Agony of Antiope. To me, it was the most tragic moment in the book. I got a very powerful image of Antiope in my mind, where a (I believe it was Stratonike's?) charge pushed her backwards, and she pulled herself back up to keep on fighting.

On the other hand, there were plenty of characters I didn't care about. Bones I felt almost no emotion towards until the end, where I felt a little bit of compassion for her. Damon's perspective was intersting, but largely uninteresting, although at some points, he peaked and was one of my favorite characters. His narrative though, when he was not directly involved with the Amazons, was a little boring, especially during the prolonged battle scenes. I actually enjoyed the battle scenes a lot for the most part, but when it was Damon..."I ran away from battle, almost got killed five times - hey, let me tell you about each one!" The gore was bland in his narratives about the great battle against Athens. Selene's narratives during this period I found to be much more interesting, since the Amazon's tactics kept me engaged.

Selene's ending, Antiope's ending, and Eleuthera's were done very well, I thought. The way Bones ended up...I didn't like that, it seemed very unnecessary, although I won't spoil the book.

Basically, I liked the Amazons (although they struck me as unrealistic at times - I mean, one day they'd kill small baby girls with the Scyths, another they'd invite them eagerly to join - around Athens, I think), and I liked Selene's narrative the most. Some of the characters were bland, but those whose struggle I came to appreciate, I really cared about by the end, more in an epic sense though, than in a human sense. It was an engaging read for me.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars I Found It To Be Magnificent
Perhaps my admiration of this novel comes partly from the fact that it is the first Stephen Pressfield book I have read. Read more
Published on April 5 2004 by Maigray

1.0 out of 5 stars Pretentious And Stale Narrative Bordering The Absurd
After reading "Tides of War" and "Gates of Fire", I found this work to be a major disappointment: almost as if it was written by another writer... Read more
Published on Feb 12 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars Clan of the Cave Bear 50,000 years later
A warrior race who is peace loving? Give me a break!
Are they really living "free"? They seem to have so many rules governing their lives - and virtually certain... Read more
Published on Jan 18 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Should make a great Hollywood bimbo Amazon movie
I was hoping for a novel that would try to put the Amzon myth into something that would appear to be realistic as a society, but to me it failed badly. Read more
Published on Jan 9 2004 by Martin

4.0 out of 5 stars For love, and for love of freedom
Steven Pressfield's "Last of the Amazons" tells the story of Theseus and his love for the Amazon queen Antiope, but it also is the story of the (possibly not so)... Read more
Published on Jan 1 2004 by Kris Dotto

3.0 out of 5 stars ok story. absorbing fight scenes.
In the beginning of the book an Amazon woman escapes captivity and a young girl runs away from her Athens home to follow. Read more
Published on Sep 29 2003 by Barbara

1.0 out of 5 stars Goofy book
Pressfield shines when he describes battle and action. His war scenes are wonderful, not overly descriptive but not abstract either. Read more
Published on Aug 29 2003 by Wicca !

4.0 out of 5 stars Good reach, author's voice over powers narrative
This book is like Pressfield other book Gates of Fire. He has done his research on Greek history. Some people in his book are comic book-like and are not believable as real... Read more
Published on Jul 17 2003 by Wyatt Kaldenberg

4.0 out of 5 stars Informative but Empathetically Dry
There is a blurb on one of the Flashman novels--I forget which and I can't find it now--which makes a comment about the author, George MacDonald Fraser. Read more
Published on Mar 10 2003 by Paul McGrath

1.0 out of 5 stars Uggh, what's that smell? Oh, it's this book
This terrible novel emphasizes all the terrible elements of Gates of Fire. Flat, cartoonish characters and stilted writing style. Stunningly bad.
Published on Mar 6 2003 by twynn@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu

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