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Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow (Trojan War Trilogy): 1

Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow (Trojan War Trilogy): 1

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Author: David Gemmell
Publisher: Corgi Books
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £2.99
You Save: £5.00 (63%)



New (27) Used (12) Collectible (2) from £1.94

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 43 reviews
Sales Rank: 1435

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 449
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.2 x 1.7

ISBN: 0552151114
EAN: 9780552151115
ASIN: 0552151114

Publication Date: April 3, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Perfect condition

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Lord of the Silver Bow (Troy Trilogy)
  • Mass Market Paperback - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow
  • Paperback - Troy - Lord of the Silver Bow (Troy Trilogy)
  • Hardcover - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow (Troy)
  • Hardcover - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow
  • Unknown Binding - Lord of the Silver Bow -Lib (Troy Trilogy)
  • Library Binding - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow
  • Paperback - Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow

Similar Items:

  • Troy: Shield of Thunder (Trojan War Trilogy): 2
  • Troy: Fall of Kings (Trojan War Trilogy): 3
  • Lords of the Bow (Conqueror 2)
  • Wolf of the Plains (Conqueror 1)
  • Bones of the Hills (Conqueror 3)

Customer Reviews:   Read 38 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars "Fantastic" what more can one say   June 27, 2008
A.G. (Mayenne,France)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have just finished reading `Troy fall of kings` the third book in this trilogy & what an uptake on the Troy legend,all three books are absolutely brilliant. I would like to think that some day maybe Peter Jackson or another with his vision & imagination would make some David Gemmell heroic fantasy novels into films & give them the true accolade they deserve. The best heroic fantasy novel books I have ever read.


4 out of 5 stars Superb swashbuckling adventure with a Greek setting   April 11, 2008
N. Burgess
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Although this is set in ancient Greece it could really be set in Drenai or any other of Gemmell's worlds as it reads very similar to those, which is no bad thing as no one does heroic fantasy better than Gemmell.

This book is full of action, violence and war-mongering, along with some very well written characters. Gemmell's heros are never whiter than white, they always have their own flaws, which makes them very believable. Another awesome book from Gemmell.



5 out of 5 stars Fantastic Read!   March 28, 2008
Gary Austin (Derbyshire UK)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

As with a number of other reviewers this was the first time I have read David Gemmell and it won't be the last. I enjoy historical fiction and this book is up there with the best. It is a great mix of awesome battles, romance, legend and humanity that leaves you unable to put it down. I read the last 250 pages on a transatlantic flight and couldn't wait to get volume two out of my suitcase when I got to my hotel room! If you enjoy Cornwell, Scarrow and Iggulden you will love this one.


5 out of 5 stars Almost flawlessly enjoyable   March 23, 2008
A. Whitehead (Colchester, Essex United Kingdom)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

David Gemmell was a prolific and popular author of heroic fantasy, penning more than thirty novels (most of them well-receved) between the 1984 release of Legend and his death in the summer of 2006. His final project was The Troy Trilogy, an epic retelling of the Trojan War, its causes and consequences, marrying the likely historical reality of the conflict (now seen less as a story of doomed love and more the explosion of tensions building up over decades between the Greek cities and the Hittite Empire) with some fantastical elements, although these are mostly restricted to prophetic dreams. Arguably the trilogy, or at least Lord of the Silver Bow, barely qualifies as fantasy, instead more neatly falling into the subgenre of the 'speculative historical' novel shared by the likes of Cornwell's Warlord Chronicles.

The time is three thousand years and more in the past. The world is dominated by the Great Green, the vast sea that divides the Greek city-states (now coming under the dominion of Mykene and its ruthless king, Agamemnon) from the Hittites and their colonies in the near east, Assyria further to the east and Egypte to the south. Lord of the Silver Bow is the story of several individuals. Helikaon, Prince of Dardania, is a warrior and sailor beyond compare, dubbed 'The Golden One' for his legendary luck and pride. He has built the Xanthos, the biggest ship on the Great Green, which sailors fear as it challenges the might of Poseidon. Helikaon is being hunted by assassins and has made an enemy of the Mykene for slaughtering their hero Alektruon, a pirate and reaver, but is unaware that Agamemnon has been told of a prophecy that he will be responsible for Agamemnon's downfall.

Meanwhile, the beautiful Andromache, exiled to the island of Thera by her father, is recalled after the death of her sister and is pledged to marry Prince Hektor of Troy, a warrior of legend. Her journey to Troy brings her into contact with Helikaon and his crew, a meeting that will spark many unfortunate events to come. The last of the three central characters is Argurios, a mighty Mykene warrior who loaths Helikaon, but destiny and honour compel him to fight alongside the Golden One and forge a story that will become a legend across the Great Green and challenge Agamemnon's wisdom and reputation.

Around these three central characters other lives become entangled: Xander, the ship's boy who becomes interested in healing; the strange Trojan girl and prophetess, Kassandra; the Egyptean exiled prince Gershom; the mighty warrior and legendary tale-spinner Odysseus, King of Ithaka; and King Priam himself, a contradictary figure, cruel and hateful one moment, with occasional flashes of honour and mercy.

Lord of the Silver Bow is nearly a flawlessly enjoyable book, with a depth of writing that is hugely engrossing and characters that leap clear of the page in their vividness. Such is the strength of the story that you forget you are reading a story that you know the end of, and the moments in the story that do intersect with the legend are all the most impressive for that, such as when the reader realises that Helikaon is actually Aeneas and when Prince Paris crops up for one of his extremely infrequent appearances. The combat sequences are brutal and convincing; the characters' philosophical musings are short, to the point and do not slow down the action; the drawing of the characters is so well-achieved that some of the deaths at the end of the book are almost physically painful to read about.

Lord of the Silver Bow (**** ) is laying the groundwork for the war to come, but is in itself a hugely accomplished and significant epic fantasy novel with enough closure to make it a great self-contained work. The other two books in the sequence are Shield of Thunder and Fall of Kings.



4 out of 5 stars Not His Best, But Still Better Than Most   February 2, 2008
J. Chippindale (England)

David Gemmell is without doubt the best fantasy author on the planet and it seems almost churlish trying to write a review of one of his books. His books are crying out to be read by as many people as possible. They speak for themselves. The best or worst of reviews will never change that.

The book is a fascinating recreation of the myths that surround Troy, a city that was once thought to be a myth but is now a proven fact, thanks to its discovery by Heinrich Schliemann in the mid nineteenth century.

David Gemmell weaves his magical spell yet again and takes the reader over the walls and into the mystical city of Troy. A city that is having its very heart and soul ripped out by destructive rivalries. Beyond the walls Troy's enemies watch and wait, plotting the downfall of the city and lusting after its riches.

One way or the other there is bound to be death and destruction.

David Gemmell always leaves his readers' wanting more, more, more . . .


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