An Arrow's Flight

by Mark Merlis

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

FICT-G Merl

Publication

St Martins Pr (1998), 376 pages

Description

Pyrrhus is a male stripper in a bar in Ancient Greece. However, destiny has scheduled him for a career change. For Pyrrhus is the son of Achilles, and the oracle has proclaimed that he will lead the Myrmidons to victory.

User reviews

LibraryThing member LSUTiger
Quite simply, I think this is one of the best works of gay fiction ever. I found it literary, erotic, funny, and very well written. That's why Merlis' next book was such a disappointment for me, but this and "American Studies" are both excellent!
LibraryThing member mtilleman07
Really pretty stunning. It would, of course, have to end with HIV, although the refiguring of the sack of Troy (which never happens here) is one of the more original and interesting takes on the beginning of HIV that there is. The writing is witty and comes at the reader with great velocity - I
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can't think of a better way to describe it. The story is almost always breathless. This is an erudite, playful, thought-provoking book, and is sending me back to read the Aeneid for the first time in a decade.

As to all the *sex,* either you're a gay man, in which case the descriptions of sex are overwrought but onto something deep, or you're not a gay man, in which case you ought to deal since gay men deal with depictions of everyone else in the world having sex all the time.
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LibraryThing member starlight70
For someone who does not know much about Greek history and the myth, this book is an eye-opener. Never knew there was a continuation after Achilles and Troy saga. This book was written brilliantly, if not deep, with a good play of words and humor. So, the story continued after Achilles was brought
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down, with the main character being Achilles's son - Pyrrhus, who hustled for money to pay for his freedom from his castle life. And then came the message that he was supposed to lead the war to win the battle against Troy. The fun had already begun even before the ship sailed off, with Pyrrhus.
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LibraryThing member marq
Brilliant from beginning to end.

I have never read a book where the narrator so clearly and personally addresses himself to his gay male audience as this one.

There is more than a bit of sex in this book but it is realistic and not gratuitous. Overall, it is a very thoughtful book that explores the
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theme of destiny.

Its playful anachronisms (set in ancient Greece but with all the modern conveniences) never gets boring (unlike some other books that try this) but also in my mind applies the ancient themes of fate to modern times. Who doesn't know a Pyrrhus? Young, beautiful, indestructible (or thinks he is), escapes from the family home to a flat in the big city, sex, drugs, like an arrows flight. We know where it ends up.
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LibraryThing member anderlawlor
I love this book, in part because of Merlis's use of anachronism, which some people find gimmicky. I don't care. He uses the story of the Trojan War to talk about AIDS and the "gay community" and I just found it really moving.
LibraryThing member et.carole
Merlis did well developing characters and blending the Trojan war with a modern urban world. Though his decision to use a contemporary attitude toward sexuality was very distracting for me, I can understand why he did so, and his use of metaphor was well-woven. His narrative attitude was enhanced
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by moments of direct address to the reader by the narrator, which provided perspective on the events and characters, and an awareness that made the book more enjoyable.
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Awards

Lambda Literary Award (Winner — 1998)
Gaylactic Spectrum Award (Nominee — Novel — 1999)
Stonewall Book Award (Finalist — Literature — 1999)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1998

ISBN

0312186754 / 9780312186753

Rating

½ (60 ratings; 3.9)
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