The Silence of the Girls - Pat Barker
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
12-1100BC
 Achilles
 Agamemnon
 Briseis
 Greece
 Iliad
 Troy
 War
Shared by:jodindy
Written by
Read by Kristin Atherton, Michael Fox
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
Release date: September 5, 2018
Duration: 10:44:45
One of The Washington Post’s 50 Most Notable Books of 2018
One of NPR’s Best Books of 2018
One of Vanity Fair’s Best Fall Books of 2018
“An important, powerful, memorable book that invites us to look differently not only at The Iliad but at our own ways of telling stories about the past and the present.”
—Emily Wilson, translator of The Odyssey
Pat Barker turns her attention to the timeless legend of The Iliad, as experienced by the captured women living in the Greek camp in the final weeks of the Trojan War.
“Great Achilles, Brilliant Achilles, Shining Achilles, godlike Achilles…How the epithets pile up. We never called him any of those things: we called him “the butcher.”
The ancient city of Troy has withstood a decade under siege of the powerful Greek army, who continue to wage bloody war over a stolen woman—Helen. In the Greek camp, another woman watches and waits for the war’s outcome: Briseis. She was queen of one of Troy’s neighboring kingdoms, until Achilles, Greece’s greatest warrior, sacked her city and murdered her husband and brothers. Briseis becomes Achilles’s concubine, a prize of battle, and must adjust quickly in order to survive a radically different life, as one of the many conquered women who serve the Greek army.
When Agamemnon, the brutal political leader of the Greek forces, demands Briseis for himself, she finds herself caught between the two most powerful of the Greeks. Achilles refuses to fight in protest, and the Greeks begin to lose ground to their Trojan opponents. Keenly observant and cooly unflinching about the daily horrors of war, Briseis finds herself in an unprecedented position to observe the two men driving the Greek forces in what will become their final confrontation, deciding the fate, not only of Briseis’s people, but also of the ancient world at large.
Briseis is just one among thousands of women living behind the scenes in this war—the slaves and prostitutes, the nurses, the women who lay out the dead—all of them erased by history. With breathtaking historical detail and luminous prose, Pat Barker brings the teeming world of the Greek camp to vivid life. She offers nuanced, complex portraits of characters and stories familiar from mythology, which, seen from Briseis’s perspective, are rife with newfound revelations. Barker’s latest builds on her decades-long study of war and its impact on individual lives—and it is nothing short of magnificent.
This extraordinary collaboration between the Booker Prize-winning novelist Pat Barker and superb narrators Kristin Atherton and Michael Fox reimagines the passionate, bloody, mythic Trojan War of Homer’s ILIAD. Once begun, you will want to abandon everything to spend time with Fox’s “Great” Achilles (aka The Butcher) and Atherton’s Briseis, a Trojan queen become his bed-slave. Barker’s vivid rendering summons fabled names and nobodies to the mighty and petty human drama of Troy’s siege. Atherton, who carries most of the narrative, offers imaginative, vivid characterizations and narrates in a fervent, crisp, fierce voice as Briseis balances the demands of men and gods with the needs and terrors of captured women. Fox’s chapters in Achilles’s educated, vehement voice are a perfect counterpoint. This is a must-listen. A.C.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award � AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
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| Creation Date: | Tue, 21 May 2019 02:37:10 +0100 |
| This is a Multifile Torrent | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part01.mp3 32.77 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part02.mp3 32.73 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part03.mp3 31.96 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part04.mp3 34.06 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part05.mp3 33.82 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part06.mp3 35.11 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part07.mp3 34.34 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part08.mp3 28.73 MBs | |
| The Silence of the Girls-Part09.mp3 31.65 MBs | |
| Combined File Size: | 295.18 MBs |
| Piece Size: | 256 KBs |
| Comment: | Updated by AudioBook Bay |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| Info Hash: | cd495c84794bb30b555d7264053f8095314ea04c |
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This post has 17 comments with rating of 4.5/5
May 21st, 2019
Yet another “Feminist” revisionist historical fiction with convenient praise from Emily Wilson who wrote her own Odyssey and claimed it was “a new” Homer’s Odyssey translation!
May 21st, 2019
Please feel free to drop your translation of Homer’s Odyssey whenever it becomes available. Thanks in advance and thank you, jodindy, for the share.
May 21st, 2019
Thanks, sounds fantastic!
Except for poor marcodiluce, who I am sure has contributed far less to the world. Pathetic.
May 21st, 2019
Thanks!
May 22nd, 2019
cyclonsarecuddly - It’s always a bit rich to hear the rewriters of history and reality call anyone else “pathetic”
And as for “Malachie520″ - you’ll have already done your own translation of Homer anyways no doubt.
I can just imagine the SJW revisionist Trojan War - Helen was a warrior lesbian, Achilles a cowardly Trump supporter, along with warmongering Israeli Agamemnon, Odysseus a homosexual hero, along with Hector - a crossdresser who’s nobility etc etc etc ad naseum…..
Apart from the SJW whining, onto the book - It’s nice someone else has a different view of the Trojan War. Invented or not, similar characters WOULD have existed. The Greeks treatment of hostages were no better than the jihadis the PC brigade make excuses for. Whether it is “feminist” or not doesn’t really matter as we always need another view of the war and different characters concerned apart from Homer’s
May 25th, 2019
@Basileus5 “I can just imagine the SJW “: yeah, in other words, make up a straw man as an excuse to ridicule and attack your usual targets.
June 30th, 2019
@marcodiluce, just wondering if you’ve read the Regeneration trilogy? You might perhaps be a little more forgiving of her if you had? (it’s very, very very good)
September 20th, 2021
What does historical revisionism even have to do with this? It’s fiction, and even in that context its’s probably no more revisionist than Shakespeare or Euripides.
January 3rd, 2023
Thank you!
September 9th, 2024
lmao, love all the discourse, as if pat barker is gonna see the comments on the torrent site where her book is being downloaded illegally lmaooooo
October 15th, 2024
Any of you willing to seed for a while so I can download this. Would be much apprecaited!
October 15th, 2024
whoever you are, thank you
January 1st, 2025
If anyone were willing to seed, I would be really grateful!
April 27th, 2025
can anyone seed?
August 3rd, 2025
Somebody please seed for a few minutes?
January 6th, 2026
Hate to repeat myself, but could somebody seed for a few minutes?
April 20th, 2026
Can anyone please seed
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