Liu takes stories we think we know and turns them toward us again, asking new and pressing questions: what makes a man a hero? What does homecoming mean when the home you will return to no longer exists as you remember it? How do humans handle internal conflict, and what do we become in the aftermath of war when battles still remain within ourselves?
Liu invites ancient voices to speak in new ways, and what results is a vibrant collage of moments that form a larger chorus into experiencing the ancient world in a modern time. After Troy moves fluidly between three distinct modes: the historical context that grounds us in the events and ideas that shaped Greek and Roman life, the three-part narrative that lets us to live vividly inside these histories, and the interviews that offer humorous and intimate glimpses into what well-known characters might share if invited to do so now.
Liu writes with a curiosity, intimacy, vividness, and complexity that invites readers in, whether they know these myths deeply or are learning about them for the first time. His retellings remind us that the journeys of the ancients were not just about battles or gods, but about the endurance of human feeling: loyalty, grief, courage, the gravitational desire to be loved and remembered. Like the heroes it follows, this book honors its lineage while creating new connections, showing how we, too, inherit the contradictions of classical heroes: longing for both adventure and safety, immortality and rest, and connection and freedom.
There's a reason we still turn to these stories millennia later, and Liu highlights the importance of their longevity so clearly through his fresh perspective, attuned voice, and thrilling debut exploration.
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