Nicolas Nicastro's 2005 novel The Isle of Stone takes a look at Spartan Society nearly sixty years after the battle of Thermopylae, specifically during the battle of Sphacteria (325 BCE). The novel focuses on two Spartan warriors, Antalcidas and Epitadas, brothers who were raised in two very different, but traditional Spartan styes.
Much like John Gardiner's The Wreckage of Agathon, The Isle of Stone looks at the Spartan Empire with a jaundiced eye. The empire is portrayed as brutal, and neither brother is drawn in a particularly heroic way. What I really liked about the novel was the character of the warrior's mother and her rationalization for why she helps one brother and hurts the other. The ethics of the Spartans, as described by Nicastro, definitely leave a lot to be desired.
The majority of the action of the story takes place with an army of Spartans under siege on a barren island surrounded by the Athenian navy. The story moves quickly and although I didn't like it as much as Nicastro's other work on the list (Antigone's Wake - which I LOVED!), it does work to give an unflinching look at a culture often celebrated in our modern day.
Little, Big
2 months ago
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