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Dateline Troy Discussion Guide

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D I S C U S S I O N G U I D E

SYNOPSIS DISCUSSION POINTS

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?

GREEKS TROJANS While reading:


Warriors Warriors 1. Why has Paul Fleischman chosen to pair the events of the story with contemporary
Achilles, son of Thetis Hector, eldest son of Priam newspaper articles? In the introduction, he says, “The Trojan War is still being
Agamemnon, king of Mycenae Paris, son of Priam and Hecuba fought.” (p. 9) What does this mean and what does it say about humanity and war?
Ajax Priam, king of Troy
2. The three goddesses each want to be judged the most beautiful by Paris — and
Diomedes, king of Argos Gods and Goddesses Aiding the Trojans everybody else. Why do we feel it is so important to be beautiful? Do you think
Idomeneus, king of Crete Aphrodite, goddess of love the newspaper article’s findings are true (p. 15) — that ugly people are treated
Menelaus, king of Sparta Zeus, king of the gods badly just because of their looks? How important is appearance to you in choosing
Neoptolemus, son of Achilles Priest
your friends? What about someone you would date?
Odysseus, king of Ithaca Laocoön
3. Even though Priam sent the infant Paris away to die, he is overjoyed to have his
Patroclus, friend of Achilles Women
lost son back. Why does he change his mind about his son’s survival? He says,
Philoctetes, master archer Cassandra, a prophetess,
“Better that Troy should burn than that my precious son should die!” (p.18)
Prince Palamedes daughter of Priam
Was it? The story of a baby left in the wilderness to die who is saved and returns
Protesilaus, first to be killed Hecuba, queen of Troy
as an adult is a common one in folklore. Can you think of another example?
Goddesses Aiding the Greeks Helen, wife of Menelaus, formerly of Troy
Why is this idea so intriguing?
Athena, goddess of wisdom and battle Polyxena, daughter of Priam
4. Cassandra, Paris’s sister, has been cursed by Apollo to always see the truth but
Hera, wife of Zeus Civilian Men
Antenor never to be believed when she warns people about what is sure to happen.
Thetis, sea nymph and
mother of Achilles Nauplius, father of Palamedes Can you think of any modern Cassandras? Have you ever felt this way?
Priest 5. Both Odysseus and Achilles use tricks to try to avoid going to war. Are people
OTHER GODDESSES
Calchas, priest of Apollo, justified in refusing to fight in a war they don’t care about or think is wrong?
Artemis, goddess of the hunt
formerly of Troy Are there any circumstances about a war that might change your answer? What
Eris, goddess of strife
Women are some ways Americans have attempted to evade serving in the military? Is this
Briseis, captive concubine always cowardice? Is it always moral courage?
Chryseis, captive concubine
Iphigenia, Agamemnon’s daughter
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6. Do you think Menelaus is primarily motivated by love when he sets out to 14. In most stories about war, there are the bad guys on one side and the good guys
retrieve Helen? What are some other emotions that might be involved? Is getting on the other. How is this story different? Can you name any other war books or
Helen back the main reason the other princes agree to go to war? Do you think movies that show the war from both armies’ perspectives? If you didn’t know
Agamemnon might have had other motivations for wanting to sack Troy? It has how the war was going to turn out and you had to choose to be on one side or
been said that there are two reasons for every war — the one the leaders tell the the other, would you join up with the Greeks or the Trojans? Why?
people and the one that is the real cause. Many historians believe that the real 15. The sack of Troy leaves all males in the city — young and old — dead and
cause for this war was that Troy collected tolls from ships passing through the the women carried off as slaves. Whom do we count when we add up the
Dardenelles Strait. Can you think of some modern examples of popular and cost of a war? Can you find some statistics on the London blitz or the Dresden
hidden causes for wars? firebombing in World War II? What about the nuclear bomb attack on
7. Iphigenia gives up her life willingly so the Greek ships can have favorable winds Hiroshima or Iraqi civilian casualties in the current war?
from Artemis. Was this heroic? What do you think of people who kill themselves to 16. When the war and the homecoming are over, who of the following are still
dramatize a cause they believe in, as the headlines opposite this passage describe? left alive: Agamemnon, Achilles, Paris, Hector, Ajax, Palamedes, Patroclus,
Do their actions differ from those of terrorist suicide bombers? If so, how? Odysseus, Menelaus, and Helen? “After ten years of fighting,” the book ends,
8. Protesilaus is the first Greek to be killed in the war, and when his wife learns of “who could tell the victor from the vanquished?” (p. 74) Do all wars follow
his death, she stabs herself to be with him in the afterlife. What sorrows, risks, this pattern? What does it mean to “win” a war?
and dangers are particular to women in war? Poll your friends to see if the girls’
Further Discussion
attitude toward war differs from that of the boys. Is there a significant
difference? Does that surprise you? Look at the list of opinions about war you made before reading this book. Has your
position on the scale changed? Why or why not?
9. On page 51, the article describes a U.S. government plan under the Reagan
administration in which false information, or “disinformation,” was fed to Are there ever just wars? Does the Trojan War pass your justification test? What
important American media to convince Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi that about the wars of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries?
he was about to be attacked. Do you think lying to the people for strategic
A N I N T E RV I E W W I T H PA U L F L E I S C H M A N
reasons can be justified?
Q. How old were you when you first began to hear stories about the Trojan War? What
10. In the descriptions of the battles in this book, and in most movies, we see
were the circumstances?
individuals facing off and trying to kill each other. How is modern war different
from this scenario? Which would make you feel worse—to kill one other person A. I somehow missed both the Iliad and Odyssey in junior high and high school.
face-to-face or to kill thousands by pushing a button? The book that hooked me was Robert Graves’s The Siege and Fall of Troy, a
simple retelling that I came upon in college. I was amazed to find that the
11. When his friend Patroclus is killed in battle with Hector, Achilles howls for
Trojan War was such a terrific story. Twenty years later, that ember was still
revenge. Calls for revenge—as in the case of the Trojan War—have a way of
glowing in my mind and led to Dateline: Troy.
escalating rather than ending violence. Are there other responses open to
individuals and countries who feel they’ve been wronged? Q. Homer’s Iliad focuses on the wrath of Achilles during the Trojan War and its
outcome. Why did you choose to go back and include the whole story leading up to
12. Which character best fits each of these words: tricky, conceited, loyal, heroic,
these events?
treacherous, dumb, tough, loving, frustrated, envious. What actions show this? What
one character do you like best? Which one would you like to play in a film? A. The Robert Graves book had opened my eyes to how much of the Trojan War’s
story takes place before and after the Iliad. Those scenes contain great drama—
13. There are several places in the story where the Trojan War might have been
Paris’s birth and rescue, Agamemnon sacrificing his daughter, the wooden horse
avoided if certain actions had taken place. What are some of them? Why is it
being pulled into Troy. They also give readers a background from which the war
so hard to stop the momentum building toward a war?

✦ C A N D L E W I C K P R E S S D I S C U S S I O N G U I D E – D A T E L I N E : T R O Y ✦
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
✦ C A N D L E W I C K P R E S S D I S C U S S I O N G U I D E – D A T E L I N E : T R O Y ✦
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

PAUL FLEISCHMAN has written thirty-two books —


eleven novels, two collections of short stories, three
books of poetry, three books of nonfiction, nine picture
books, three plays, and Dateline: Troy, in a category all
its own. His works are often new and surprising, such as
Zap, a smart, farcical play aimed at a generation of short
attention spans with a taste for razor-sharp comedy, and
Graven Images, a Newbery Honor–winning trio of eerie,
beguiling short stories about the unexpected ways in
which an artist’s creations can reveal truths.
Fleischman grew up in Santa Monica, California, hearing his writer father, Sid
Fleischman, read aloud from his own books as he wrote them. Paul Fleischman
says, “Words have always been my world.” After two years of college at the
University of California at Berkeley, he took off across the country by bicycle and
ended up in a two hundred-year-old house in New Hampshire, where he lived for
several years without electricity or a telephone. He went on to graduate from the
University of New Mexico, after which his jobs have included bookstore clerk,
library book shelver, proofreader, bagel baker, and, finally, prize-winning author.
Fleischman has two grown sons, Seth and Dana, and lives with his wife, Patty,
in northern California, where even their home village — Aromas — has a
surprising name.
Paul Fleischman’s books are available wherever books are sold and through educational
distributors nationwide.

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.
This discussion guide contains website addresses to third-party sites for informational purposes. These sites are provided solely as a convenience
to you, and the inclusion of any such site does not imply endorsement by Candlewick Press, Inc., of such third-party sites or the contents thereof.
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