The King Must Die; The Bull from the Sea: Introduction by Daniel Mendelsohn (Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics Series)

$26.99
by Mary Renault

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A hardcover omnibus edition of the two classic novels in which Mary Renault brilliantly recreated the legendary hero Theseus and his defeat of the Minotaur. CONTEMPORARY CLASSICS. In her inventive novels of ancient Greece, Mary Renault performs the alchemical feats of fashioning from the myth of Theseus a convincingly flawed hero and of weaving a thrillingly plausible account of the events that inspired the fantastical tale of the Labyrinth and the Minotaur.    The King Must Die follows young Theseus from his mystery-shrouded birth and youthful insecurity about his small size, through his growing strength and ingenuity to a dawning belief in his destiny. When teenaged Theseus sets out to join his true father, the King of Athens, he is delayed by unforeseen adventures: first by a perilous forced sojourn in the matriarchal society of Eleusis and next when he volunteers to join the annual tribute of Athenian youths sent to be sacrificed to a bull-worshipping cult on the island of Crete. Once trapped in the labyrinthine palace of King Minos, Theseus enlists the help of the high priestess Ariadne in a daring plan to free the Athenians forever from the dominance of Crete.    The Bull from the Sea begins after Theseus’s triumphal return to Athens, where he finds that his father has died and he is now king. But his confidence in his divinely ordained destiny will be shaken by the adventures yet ahead of him: a life-changing encounter with Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons; the birth of a son who will insist on choosing his own path; and the tragic results of his wife Phaedra’s treachery. Combining her deep understanding of the cultures of the ancient Greek world with inspired speculation, Renault brings the heroes and monsters of legend enthrallingly to life.   Everyman's Library pursues the highest production standards, printing on acid-free cream-colored paper, with full-cloth cases with two-color foil stamping, decorative endpapers, silk ribbon markers, European-style half-round spines, and a full-color illustrated jacket. Contemporary Classics include an introduction, a select bibliography, and a chronology of the author's life and times. “Renault’s historical novels...are among the finest ever written.” — The Washington Post Book World “A remarkable accomplishment.... Pure fictional gold." — The Philadelphia Inquirer “Excellent entertainment.... What Renault has done, and done with consummate beauty, is to breathe life and light into the faces of heroic personages.” — The New York Times Book Review MARY RENAULT (1905–1983) was the author of more than a dozen novels. She was born in London, educated at Oxford, and trained as a nurse. After World War II she and her life partner, Julie Mullard, settled in South Africa and traveled widely in Africa and Greece. This was when she began writing her historical novels, including The King Must Die , The Last of the Wine , and The Persian Boy , and a biography of Alexander the Great, The Nature of Alexander . About the Introducer: DANIEL MENDELSOHN is a frequent contributor to The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books. His books include the international best seller The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award; a memoir, The Elusive Embrace, a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year; and An Odyssey: A Father, A Son and an Epic. He is the author of the definitive English translation of the Complete Poems of C. P. Cavafy and of two collections of essays . He teaches literature at Bard College. from the INTRODUCTION by Daniel Mendelsohn When, in the middle of the 1950s, Mary Renault sat down to write The King Must Die , her novelistic retelling of the myth of the Athenian hero Theseus, she was facing a challenge unlike any other she had previously set herself.   Nothing that Renault had done before that decade suggested that she would become one of the twentieth century’s most esteemed authors of historical fiction, whose novels of Ancient Greece, admired for both their scholarly rigor and literary texture, would sell millions of copies worldwide. Between the late Thirties and mid-Fifties, the author – who was born in London in 1905 and emigrated to South Africa after World War II – had published a number of crisply intelligent contemporary love stories with trenchant themes, among which the most persistent was the conflict between individual choice and personal happiness, on the one hand, and social conventions and historical circumstances, on the other. This theme was, perhaps, inevitable. Renault was a lesbian; two of her contemporary novels, The Friendly Young Ladies , published in 1943, and The Charioteer , which came out a decade later, treat the subject of homosexuality explicitly.   Despite a lifelong fascination with all phases of the Greek past – by the time she finished high school she had read all of Plato, and during

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