Stealing Athena, Karen Essex
Stealing Athena, Karen Essex
6 Rating(s)
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Stealing Athena

Author: Karen Essex

Narrator: Susan Denaker

Unabridged: 18 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/17/2008


Synopsis

The author of the bestselling Leonardo’s Swans traverses the centuries into the hearts of two extraordinary women to reveal the passions, ambitions, and controversies surrounding the Elgin Marbles.

The Elgin Marbles have been displayed in the British Museum for nearly two hundred years, and for just as long they have been the center of a raging controversy. In Stealing Athena, Karen Essex chronicles the Marbles’ amazing journey through the dynamic narratives of Mary Nisbet, wife of the Earl of Elgin, the British ambassador to Constantinople, and Aspasia, the mistress of Perikles, the most powerful man in Athens during that city’s Golden Age.
At the height of the Napoleonic Wars, the twenty-one-year-old, newly wed Countess of Elgin, a Scottish heiress and celebrated beauty, enchanted the power brokers of the Ottoman Empire, using her charms to obtain their permission for her husband’s audacious plan to deconstruct the Parthenon and bring its magnificent sculptures to England. Two millennia earlier, Aspasia, a female philosopher and courtesan, and a central figure in Athenian life, plied her wits, allure, and influence with equal determination, standing with Perikles at the center of vehement opposition to his vision of building the most exquisite monuments the world had ever seen.
Rich in romance and intrigue, greed and glory, Stealing Athena is an enthralling work of historical fiction and a window into the intimate lives of some of history’s most influential and fascinating women.

About The Author

KAREN ESSEX is the author of Kleopatra, Pharaoh, and the international bestseller Leonardo’s Swans, which won Italy’s prestigious 2007 Premio Roma for foreign fiction. An award-winning journalist and a screenwriter, she lives in Los Angeles, California.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Carey on September 04, 2008

If you have been to the British Museum in London you could not have missed the Elgin Marbles, those lovely white carvings taken from the Parthenon in Athens. What you might not have done is imagined the arduous task it was to move them there. In this historical novel Karen Essex has painted the pic......more

Goodreads review by Alan on December 17, 2008

This novel is the latest entry in the genre that proclaims that behind every mediocre man in history was an equally mediocre woman. Here we have the story of Lord Elgin, chiefly remembered for removing the ancient marble sculptures and friezes that decorated the Parthenon in Athens and transporting......more

Goodreads review by Lauren on April 18, 2008

I stopped worrying about historical accuracy or purple prose writing @ p.100 and gave myself over to the book which was just good, old-fashioned fun. Spoiler: Lord Elgin was a shit.......more

Goodreads review by Teddy on February 27, 2009

Stealing Athena is about two influential and custom defying women in history. Both caught between the conventions of their time and trying to help the men they loved. At 21, newlywed, Mary, the countess of Elgin used her charm and influence with the Ottoman Empire to gain permission for her husband E......more

Goodreads review by Rowizyx on November 07, 2016

Due donne legate al Partenone e separate da circa 2500 anni. Due donne straordinarie, fuori dal comune, costrette a lottare per i propri diritti e per non essere schiacciate da società repressive molto simili, malgrado l'importante stacco temporale. Nella Grecia classica, Aspasia, etera e filosofa, c......more


Quotes

“Historical fiction at its finest."
St. Petersburg Times

"A great adventure story. . . . Essex delves deeply into the lives and times of her characters in settings as diverse as ancient Greece and 18th-century Constantinople, France and Great Britain, and her women characters are spirited and memorable.”
The Times-Picayune

"Stealing Athena expounds on the weight of the past, the power of art, and the strength of women who exercised free will even when they had the fewest rights…. Uniquely relevant."
Los Angeles Times