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Last of the Amazons (2002)

por Steven Pressfield

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5801141,488 (3.64)8
Un relato épico magnífico querecrea el mundo antiguo del cual surgió el mito de la ferozcultura de las amazonas.
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It started so well, and I was enjoying it, and then.....I've realised I'm not good at reading the epic boasts of people and their multi page, single paragraph tellings of how great they are and how many people they killed in the most blood thirsty ways. (I suspect this is why I have also not read The Iliad recently).[return][return]Lots of detail in plenty of different "voices" telling different versions of events. I just lost interest about 2/3rds of the way through and couldnt face going to the end. I suspect those that can muster through the epic stories would enjoy this book to the end, it's just not for me. ( )
  nordie | Oct 14, 2023 |
I enjoyed Pressfield's book on Alexander, and thought that this book on the Amazons would be good, but I was very disappointed. It was very convoluted and confusing (especially with the different narrations by various people, who sound so alike that I kept having to go back and see who was talking at times), and there was just way too much detail on the battles. And I am a reader of history, both fiction and non-fiction. I felt that he gave almost a minute-by-minute history of the battle scenes. I kept putting the book down with frustration, and forced myself to finish it. And just too much detail on characters slaughtering person after person after person. It got boring. I wasn't even that interested in any of the characters either, they weren't very well developed. Just making a female character "tough", doesn't make her a strong character. This book just dragged waaaaaay too long! It only picked up in the last 25-30 pages, and that is the only reason I gave it 2 stars...

( )
  CRChapin | Jul 8, 2023 |
222/4 ( )
  Bella_Baxter | Jul 26, 2022 |
My disclaimer. I am a fan of Steven Pressfield. On the strength of Gates of Fire and Virtues of War I decided to read the Last of the Amazons. I wanted to like this book in an intense way. The framework of the story is superb. The idea of the story is superb. The execution is not. In short. The story focuses on the pursuit of An amazon woman across the classical Greek landscape. Sounds great? Yeah a really cool concept. The positives of the story. Incredible combat scenes and very good dialogue. Pressfield does a bang up good job of giving you a beautiful pallet of colors and descriptions of the classical Greek ideal. The images fly off the page. By the time you are done reading this book you will have blood splattered across your brow and will be checking your appendages to ensure they are still attached. The negatives of the story. The pacing is horrible and the author gets lost and loses us in his timeline. What we have is a person telling a story who is telling a story about a person telling a story that is remembering a story that someone told them about someone else telling a story. Another author, Elizabeth Kostova, is notorious for this. When someone is recalling something that happened in such a way that the tone never shifts and the recall of memory takes over and smothers the initial reason for recalling the memory. Is this a weakness in writing. Not necessarily. The Last of the Amazons should have been a little more linear and about 500 pages longer. Wallace Breem’s “Eagle in the Snow” is a good example of this. The Last of the Amazons is a good book with a good premise, but a crack running right through the middle of the story. There are way too many characters fighting for space in the short amount of time it takes to read. It could have been epic. ( )
  JHemlock | Oct 18, 2021 |
***Includes Spoilers***
Once again, Steven Pressfield dazzles with a masterful account of antiquity. His prior works have focused on classical Athens or Alexander's empire. For this venture, he takes us back further, to roughly 1300 BCE--a generation before the Trojan War. His subject matter represents a clash of cultures--that of Athens vs the Amazons--and a series of dichotomous conflicts: The confrontation between patriarchy and matriarchy, of urban vs rural, or that of city vs steppe; also, of group vs individual combat, and ultimately, the discord between the cultures of guilt and shame.

The Amazon call themselves tal Kyrte--ironically, the free people (wasn't that the Athenians?)--and the book shines when describing them, fleet of foot, lithe of limb, and unmatched on the hoof. Interestingly, the book slows and has a tendency to grow stodgy, whenever the Amazons dismount.


Pressfield describes the Amazons and their culture in lyrical terms. The beauty of their lives is sharply contrasted with the destruction they wrought on any who trespassed against them. And make no mistake about it: They absolutely destroy anyone who challenges them on the steppe. Even fellow horse folks, the Scythians, are no match for them.

One-on-one, the Amazons cut the Athenians to pieces. When forced to fight dismounted, or in urban terrain, the Athenian group tactics are more effective. Ultimately, the attrition of urban warfare, takes such a toll on the Amazons that they cannot recover.

Moreover, as Pressfield describes Athenian democracy, it does not come off better than the Amazonian matriarchy. And yet, the Athenians are heroic in their own way, even though refusing to meet the Amazons on the open plain. The heroines of the story, unrivaled Antiope, vengeful Eleuthera, and yes, the dogged hero, Theseus, are all larger than life. The humanity of the story is provided by the more down-to-earth Damon, Selene, and Bones (our narrators)--not to mention the aptly-named "Stuff."

Thus, Pressfield describes the long slow transition from the heroic age of Herakles--the first to defeat the Amazons--to that of the early classical polis. The victims of that transition were the Amazons and Theseus. Pressfield captures the poignancy of the transition brilliantly, when Theseus confronts Eleuthera again, decades after their horrific single combat. Eleuthera remarks, "Hate is a bond, Theseus. And I have hated you for a long time...The time of the free people is over. And here is the irony my friend. You who have destroyed us, you of all, Theseus, understood us best and loved us most deeply. You are one of us, and have always been (p. 377)."

The real irony is that Eleuthera was wrong: The Amazons destroyed themselves. First they cast of their greatest leader, Antiope. Then, when she left for Athens with Theseus, they decided against letting her go. Eleuthera, who's name means freedom, was the prime architect of this Athenian war. And so, the elite cavalry of the Amazons pounded themselves to dust against the Acropolis. ( )
  Teiresias1960 | Feb 24, 2018 |
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PRIAM: Once before now I travelled to Phrygia where the vines grow, and there I saw a host of Phrygian men with thier quick horses ... I too was numbered among them on the day when the Amazons came, women the equal of men.
--Homer, The Iliad
This was the origin of the Amazonian invasion of Athens, which would seem to have been no slight or womanish enterprise. For it is impossible that the Amazons should have placed their camp in the very city, and joined battle close by the Pnyx unless, having first conquered the country around about, they had thus with impunity advanced to the city. That they encamped there is certain, and may be confirmed by the names that the places thereabout yet retain, and the graves and monuments of those that fell in the battle ... For indeed we are also told that [a number] of Amazons [who] died were buried there in the place that is to this time called Amazoneum.
--Plutarch, Life of Theseus
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When I was a girl I had a nurse who was a tame Amazon.
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Un relato épico magnífico querecrea el mundo antiguo del cual surgió el mito de la ferozcultura de las amazonas.

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