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Book Review By Maureen Evans
The Athenian Murders by Jose Carlos Somoza

Heracles Pontor, Decipherer of Enigmas in ancient Athens, is asked to investigate the death of Tramachus, the son of his old friends. It appears the young man was attacked by wolves while out hunting, but Diagoras, his tutor at Plato's Academy, insists he was terrified of something and was consequently murdered. Heracles takes the case, mainly to satisfy his own curiosity about the state of the corpse.

Heracles and Diagoras question the dancer Yasintra at Piraeus, then go to the gymnasium to interview Tramachus's friends Antisus and Euneos. All seem nervous but deny any knowledge. By all accounts Tramachus was a normal young man, both virtuous and religious, participating with his family in the Eleusinian Mysteries. Heracles later discovers that Antisus and Euneos are performing in forbidden plays and attending orgiastic parties at a sculptor's studio. He deduces that Tramachus was silenced to prevent him from revealing this shameful secret.

Euneos's body is discovered on waste ground near the studio. It is said he slashed himself to death in a drunken frenzy. Heracles observes that the body was re-dressed and moved after death, which suggests murder. Dinner at the Academy leads to a confession and a rational explanation. More deaths seem only to confirm the guilt of the logical suspect and the case goes to trial. But Heracles is dissatisfied.

Haunted by doubts and dreams, Heracles finds his rationality challenged by his old schoolfellow Crantor, who once burnt his own hand to prove that reason does not rule human conduct, and by the sculptor poet Menaechmus who asserts the vitality of creativity against the sterility of the Platonic Realm of Ideas.

Alongside the main narrative, displayed as a series of footnotes, another story emerges, set in a later time. The translator of the Greek novel about Heracles Pontor is convinced a secret message is hidden in the story. He sees surreal images running riot in the text, often unnoticed by the characters themselves. He comes to believe the message directly relates to his own life, and that he is in imminent danger.


Plot & Themes
Tone of story - suspenseful (sophisticated fear)
How difficult to spot villain? - Challenging
Time/era of story:
What % of story relates directly to the mystery, not the subplot? - 70%
Special suspect? - lover
Murder of certain profession?
Kind of investigator
Kid or adult book? - Adult or Young Adult Book
Any non-mystery subplot?
descript. of violence and chases - 10 %
Planning/preparing, gather info, debate puzzles/motives - 40 %
Feelings, relationships, character bio/development - 20 %
How society works & physical descript. (people, objects, places) - 30 %
Crime Thriller Yes
Murder Mystery (killer unknown) Yes

Main Character
Gender - Male
Profession/status:
Age: - 40's-50's

Main Adversary
Identity: - an organization

Setting
Europe Yes
European country: - Greece
City? Yes

Writing Style
Accounts of torture and death? - very gorey descriptions deaths/dead bodies
Explicit sex in book? Yes
What kind of sex: - actual description of sex - descript. of breasts - descript. of male nudity
Unusual forms of death - perforation--swords/knives
Unusual form of death? Yes
Amount of dialog - significantly more dialog than descript
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