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  • Pericles and Aspasia

  • A Story of Ancient Greece
  • By: Yvonne Korshak
  • Narrated by: Alan Adelberg
  • Length: 20 hrs and 36 mins
  • 3.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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Pericles and Aspasia

By: Yvonne Korshak
Narrated by: Alan Adelberg
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Publisher's Summary

Two lovers crest the wave of the golden age of Athens: Pericles, statesman and general, and Aspasia, his courtesan, a philosopher's daughter, and a brilliant woman in her own right. In a world of hierarchies, he is at the top when she arrives as little more than flotsam cast up on Athenian shores. Their love transcends social sanctions, enduring and deepening despite the grave threat it presents to Pericles' reputation as a leader of the Athenian democracy.

The novel unfolds against the background of the arts and history of the Golden Age, seen through the eyes of two individuals, who lent their particular brilliance to make it "golden": Pericles, the great orator and visionary of democracy, and its most influential woman, Aspasia. Their story takes them from the Agora-Athens' marketplace to the Acropolis, from the raunchy Athenian Port Piraeus mercantile across the Aegean Sea to East Greece. Pericles and Aspasia - together and apart - navigate treacherous paths from venal calculations to impassioned philosophical inquiry, from high-stakes sea battles to the passions of family life.

Pericles and Aspasia engages issues that are vital today - the paradoxes of democracy, the tensions of hierarchy, the ironies of gender, and others - but this novel is immersed in classical Athens: the city, its sunshine, its physical presence, its people, and their struggles and aspirations.

©2022 Caryatid Imprint (P)2023 Yvonne Korshak

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Could not finish it.

With still 18 hours to go, we gave up! It was a disappointing attempt to show Pericles’ Athens. The most annoying thing was that the book focused on Aspesia, a female character about whom very little is known and who has been reinterpreted in many guises over the years. So we were listening to imaginary conversations between two lovers and not so much on the issues facing the characters whose life is far better documented than Aspesia’s. A love story essentially, but poorly written and even more poorly read by the narrator. The long gaps between sentences were driving us to distraction! Not a patch on Madeline Miller’s Circe or The song of Achilles.

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