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"In 306 BC, the small, free, and independent polis of Rhodes is trying to stay neutral between the local great powers, each ruled by one of Alexander the Great's marshals: Asia Minor, controlled by one-eyed Antigonos, and the Egypt of Ptolemaios. Antigonos' son, Demetrios, comes to Rhodes seeking an alliance against Ptolemaios. The Rhodians, who trade a lot with Egypt, refuse his offer.Menedemos and Sostratos take the Aphrodite to Egypt for business... and to tell Ptolemaios what has been going on. Just before they leave, they learn Demetrios has invaded the island of Cyprus, which Ptolemaios dominates. He is advancing on the southeastern town of Salamis, where Ptolemaios' brother, Menelaos, has concentrated his forces. After they pass on their news, Menedemos does business in the brash new city of Alexandria while Sostratos travels up the Nile to old, old Memphis to trade there, and to see the Pyramids and the Sphinx. Ptolemaios, meanwhile, readies a fleet to rescue his brother and drive Demetrios back to Asia Minor. Ptolemaios, needing shipping to carry weapons for the army he intends to land, coerces Menedemos into bringing the Aphrodite along as part of his expeditionary force. And so, very much against their will, Menedemos and Sostratos become small parts of one of the ancient world's greatest naval battles."--Provided by publisher.… (mere)
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Not the sausages or the battle in the Persian War, but a sea battle off Cyprus in the Successor Wars. Harry Turtledove originally published this under his H.N. Turtletaub pen name as part of a “Hellenic Traders” series; they’re now being republished the Harry Turtledove name. These are not alternate history or fantasy like the rest of Turtledove’s oeuvre, but straightforward historical fiction following the adventures of two cousins, Menedemos and Sostratos, who sail out of Rhodes on the trading vessel Aphrodite. Unfortunately I read the last novel first, because that’s how they showed up in the bookstore.

Turtledove’s history is meticulous and you really get a sense of the “look and feel” of Hellenistic times. Turtledove has always been notorious for bad sex scenes, but the ones in Salamis are a little different. Here we’re reminded that for most of history women were – well, I can’t write it. Turtledove’s protagonist Menedemos, otherwise portrayed as a decent chap, has repeated casual encounters with slave girls. He’s a little uneasy about it, mostly because the girls don’t seem to get much pleasure out of it; he always gives them a tip, and they acknowledge that at least he doesn’t beat them up like another master might, but it’s still clear that the encounter is a tedious duty that’s part of their station in life.

I don’t want to give the impression that these episodes are a major part of the novel; there’s plenty about the political situation at the beginning of the Successor Wars and the dynamics of how a trading voyage worked. But the reminder that ancient history was not a politically correct romance novel was telling for me.

For more on the time period, see Antigonas the One-eyed. ( )
1 stem setnahkt | Aug 16, 2022 |
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"In 306 BC, the small, free, and independent polis of Rhodes is trying to stay neutral between the local great powers, each ruled by one of Alexander the Great's marshals: Asia Minor, controlled by one-eyed Antigonos, and the Egypt of Ptolemaios. Antigonos' son, Demetrios, comes to Rhodes seeking an alliance against Ptolemaios. The Rhodians, who trade a lot with Egypt, refuse his offer.Menedemos and Sostratos take the Aphrodite to Egypt for business... and to tell Ptolemaios what has been going on. Just before they leave, they learn Demetrios has invaded the island of Cyprus, which Ptolemaios dominates. He is advancing on the southeastern town of Salamis, where Ptolemaios' brother, Menelaos, has concentrated his forces. After they pass on their news, Menedemos does business in the brash new city of Alexandria while Sostratos travels up the Nile to old, old Memphis to trade there, and to see the Pyramids and the Sphinx. Ptolemaios, meanwhile, readies a fleet to rescue his brother and drive Demetrios back to Asia Minor. Ptolemaios, needing shipping to carry weapons for the army he intends to land, coerces Menedemos into bringing the Aphrodite along as part of his expeditionary force. And so, very much against their will, Menedemos and Sostratos become small parts of one of the ancient world's greatest naval battles."--Provided by publisher.

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