cover image The Last Song of Penelope: A Songs of Penelope Novel

The Last Song of Penelope: A Songs of Penelope Novel

Claire North. Redhook, $30 (464p) ISBN 978-0-316-44410-1

North concludes her Ithaca trilogy (after House of Odysseus) with an intelligent revisionist portrayal of Odysseus’s return. The story opens with a gloomy assessment of the wayward hero’s island kingdom: “Everyone concurs that Ithaca is the pits.... Her inland forests are scraggy, wind-blasted things, her one city little more than a spider’s town of twisted paths and leaning houses that seem to buckle and brace against some perpetual storm.” Odysseus, who has finally come back, incognito, from the Trojan War, receives a similar scouring; he’s depicted here as a “somewhat short man with a remarkably hairy back,” who had performed “many vile and bitter deeds.” His return sets in motion a violent showdown with the legion of suitors pursuing both his wife, Penelope, and his throne. North adds satisfying depth to the character of Penelope, whose loyalty to her kingdom takes precedence over devotion to her husband, whom she resents for disguising himself to gauge her faithfulness, and for failing to consider the “delicate political balance” she’s worked to maintain. North closes out her saga on a high note. (June)