Pat Barker was born in Yorkshire and began her literary career in her late thirties, when she took a short writing course taught by Angela Carter. She has published sixteen novels, including her masterful Regeneration Trilogy which includes the Booker Prize-winning The Ghost Road. The Silence of the Girls was shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction and won an Independent Bookshop Award 2019. The Women of Troy was a number one Sunday Times bestseller. The Voyage Home continues the series.
In a novel filled with names from legend, Briseis stands tall as a
heroine: brave, smart and loyal. Barker's latest is a wonder.
*Publisher's Weekly*
This continuation of the Trojan woman's story feels like another
victory for every person who was silenced by history, their story
stolen from them
*Refinery 29*
A stirring adventure set amid a misogynist dystopia
*The Observer*
Barker is at her best when she evokes Hecuba's grief on the shore,
surrounded by a group of female slaves with the ruined city behind
them...
*TLS*
As a novelist, Barker has always looked on the world with the
combination of a cold eye and a sympathetic understanding. Her
characterisation is sharp, her sympathy deep. She extends it even
to the often brutal men.
Her overall achievement is to have taken one of the great myths of
European history, something that has permeated Western culture for
3,000 years, and made something new and immediate of it.
*i*
I'd still rather read Barker's take on the gruesome realities and
costs of war - ancient or modern - than any other novelist out
there.
*The Daily Telegraph*
Merciless, stripped of consoling beauty, impressively bleak.
*The Guardian*
This is a powerful page-turner, bringing ancient characters and
stories into full colour. Skip Homer, and just enjoy this epic
read
*Daily Express*
Briseis . . . returns again in this rich, readable sequel . . .
Barker brings to life the mythical Trojan women.
*New Statesman*
Pat Barker writes wonderfully - I've read most of her books. When
she describes something, it feels sensory and concrete. You can
imagine clearly what she's talking about. I couldn't put it
down.
*Yuval Noah Harari*
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