Amazons.

By John Man

ISBN: 9780593077603

Printed: 2018

Publisher: Corgi Books. London

Dimensions 13 × 20 × 2 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 13 x 20 x 2

£7.00
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Paperback. Black title and warriors on the orange cover.

We provide an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available

  • This used book has a £3 discount when collected from our shop

An almost new and unread book, please view photographs. Since the time of the ancient Greeks we have been fascinated by accounts of the Amazons, an elusive tribe of hard-fighting, horse-riding female warriors. Equal to men in battle, legends claimed they cut off their right breasts to improve their archery skills and routinely killed their male children to purify their ranks. For centuries people believed in their existence and attempted to trace their origins. Artists and poets celebrated their battles and wrote of Amazonia. Spanish explorers, carrying these tales to South America, thought they lived in the forests of the world’s greatest river, and named it after them.

In the absence of evidence, we eventually reasoned away their existence, concluding that these powerful, sexually liberated female soldiers must have been the fantastical invention of Greek myth and storytelling. Until now. Following decades of new research and a series of groundbreaking archeological discoveries, we now know these powerful warrior queens did indeed exist. In Amazons, John Man travels to the grasslands of Central Asia, from the edge of the ancient Greek world to the borderlands of China, to discover the truth about the warrior women mythologized as Amazons. In this deeply researched, sweeping historical epic, Man redefines our understanding of the Amazons and their culture, tracking the ancient legend into the modern world and examining its significance today.

Reviews:

  • Tremendously entertaining. — Catherine Nixey ― The Times

  • Lively. — Kathryn Hughes ― Mail on Sunday

  • Man, the enthusiastic historian of Asia, dissected the Amazons with a sharp scalpel. Vivid and personal. ― The Spectator

  • Entertaining, fascinating, intriguing. However they are portrayed, the Amazons appear to have enduring appeal. — Philip Womack ― Literary Review

  • The Amazonian ideal of strong, independent women, able to take on men on equal terms, remains as fascinating to us now as it was to the ancient Greeks. — Jane Shilling ― Daily Mail

John Man is a historian and travel writer with a special interest in Mongolia. After reading German and French at Oxford he did two postgraduate courses, one in the history of science at Oxford, the other in Mongolian at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London.

John has written acclaimed and highly successful biographies of Genghis Khan, Attila the Hun and Kublai Khan as well as Alpha Beta, on the history of the alphabet, and The Gutenberg Revolution, on the invention of printing.

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