Dateline Troy Discussion Guide
Dateline Troy Discussion Guide
Dateline Troy Discussion Guide
The story of the Trojan War is the first written record of Western civilization. Before reading:
It comes to us through the writings of the ancient Greeks, most notably in a long Although Homer’s Iliad was probably written about 800 B.C., it describes events
poem, The Iliad, composed by Homer around 800 B.C. It is really made up of that may have happened somewhere around 1100 B.C. Find a timeline that shows
what was going on elsewhere in the world at this time. How long was the Trojan
many linked stories, each of which could stand alone. Many plays, novels, movies,
War after the building of the pyramids in Egypt, or Stonehenge in England? How
dances, statues, and paintings have been based on these characters and events.
long before the lives of Jesus, Buddha, and Mohammed? How long before the
The story begins with the nightmare of pregnant Hecuba, queen of Troy, in Roman Empire or the age of knights in Europe? How long before you were born?
which she gives birth to a mass of flaming snakes. It ends, as the priest Calchas Number from 1 to 10 on a sheet of paper. After number 1, write, “War is horrifying,
has foretold, with death, destruction, and the fall of Troy. awful, and wrong” and after number 10, write, “War is interesting, exciting, and
necessary.” Where does your own opinion fall between these two opposites? What
C A S T O F C H A R AC T E R S might be some of the other positions on the scale?
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grows. Homer could begin the Iliad in the war’s tenth year because his listeners seems to me to be less the glory of killing than the tragedy of death — a
would have known all the scenes that came before. mourning for men robbed of the sight of their wives and homelands, sent to
Q. What were your main sources for these stories? Did you find any conflicts or Hades before their time for the sake of a squabble kept alive by the gods.
different versions?
OT H E R B O O K S TO C O M PA R E A N D C O N T R A S T
A. I read many different versions, from Graves to Nathaniel Hawthorne to modern
Goddess of Yesterday by Caroline B. Cooney (Delacorte, 2002)
retellings. Robert Graves’s The Greek Myths was valuable not only for its
A young girl is taken as a hostage from her island home by a king on his way to visit
anthropology but for the many variants it included — one of which had
Troy—with very bad timing.
Odysseus slain by his son upon arriving back in Ithaca. Since it mirrored the
unhappy ends that many of the Greeks met, I used that event in the first edition The Greek News (History News Series) (Candlewick, 1996)
of Dateline: Troy, but I replaced it in the update with the more commonly Life in ancient Greece is presented in the form of a daily newspaper written
known version from the Odyssey. at the time.
Q. How long did it take you to collect all those newspaper articles? How many The Hero Schliemann: The Dreamer Who Dug for Troy by Laura Amy Schlitz
newspapers did you read daily? (Candlewick, 2006)
Archaeologist? Mythmaker? Crook? Decide for yourself after reading this biography
A. I spent several years, on and off, on the book. By the end, I could thread every
of the man who found the real Troy.
kind of microfilm known to man. Coming up with modern-day parallels was
the first task — not always easy. As for clippings, the Internet didn’t exist when Hiroshima by Clive A. Lawton (Candlewick, 2004)
I worked on the first edition, in the mid-1990s, meaning I was limited to papers A renowned authority investigates the events that led up to the disaster at
I could actually see in libraries — the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and the Hiroshima in 1945—and discusses the consequences we are still living with today.
local papers from my region of California. Whenever I traveled, I ducked into the Inside the Walls of Troy: A Novel of the Women Who Lived the Trojan War
library, prayed the local paper had been indexed, and worked on various clipping by Clemence McLaren (Simon Pulse, 2004)
ideas that had stumped me. Some I never solved to my complete satisfaction. Helen and Cassandra tell their side of the story.
The Internet brought access to thousands of papers and the ability to search by
September 11, 2001: Attack on New York City by Wilborn Hampton (Candlewick, 2003)
headline—a dream come true. This made it infinitely easier to both bring in the
One horrifying day in history as described by those who experienced it firsthand.
last decade’s top stories and improve on those troublesome matches.
Q.Why do you think this story has survived for three thousand years? WEBSITES
A. Because human nature and human predicaments are eternal—and full of Timeless Myths: The Trojan War
compelling drama. Love, grief, fear, lies, secrets, surprises . . . we know these http://www.timelessmyths.com/classical/trojanwar.html
emotions, dilemmas, disasters. Literature travels at the speed of light, connecting A treasury of highly detailed yet readable links to every aspect and character of the
us with all people and all places. Trojan War story.
Q. Do you think that Homer’s story of the Trojan War glorifies war or deplores it? Or Quiz—The Trojan War and the Iliad
does it do both? http://www.infoplease.com/quizzes/iliad/1.html
A. The Iliad is no army recruiting film. Homer spends as much time lamenting High scores are easy for anybody who’s read Dateline: Troy.
deaths as reveling in them. “And darkness covered his eyes” is his standard—but Achilles at the Gates
always haunting—line describing a warrior’s death. Fallen warriors don’t ascend http://www.archaeology.org/online/interviews/shanower.html
to Valhalla or receive parades, but rather are stripped of their armor while their An extremely interesting interview with Eric Shanower, the creator of Age of Bronze,
souls make their way to the gloom of the underworld. Though battles are in which he talks about his archaeological research.
described in great detail, everything is richly described in Homer. His subject
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AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
This discussion guide was prepared by Patty Campbell, a critic, librarian, writer, editor, and teacher in the
field of young adult literature, and winner of the Grolier Award from the American Library Association
and the ALAN Award from the National Council of Teachers of English.
Cover photographs: copyright © 2006 by Chris Hondras/Getty Images (background); copyright © 2006
by Ashley Gilbertson/Aurora/Getty Images (foreground soldier); copyright © 2006 by MARWAN
NAAMANI/AFP/Getty Images (soldiers with rifles); Greek battle image copyright © 2006 by Stapleton
Collection/CORBIS; Greek figure used by permission of the Antikensammlung, Munich.
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