Electra


Book Description

'My sandals were made to glide over the marble floor of the Palace of Mycenae, not to walk the road like a common market trader.Of course, as a princess, I was unused to walking.Only female slaves and whore are seen in public.Only female slaves and whores walk...' Electra is the final book in The Delphic Women trilogy. Electra is forced to flee her home after witnessing the shocking murder of her father, Agamemnon. But life outside the palace walls is frightening. The free and easy ways of her foreign companions disturb her - especially the scandalous relationship between the Trojan woman, Cassandra, and the two men - but she needs their help to survive. Along the way, Electra's travels - driven by a burning desire for revenge - become a different kind of journey. Electra evokes the dark perils and pleasures of the ancient world with a contemporary sensual intensity.




Dramas


Book Description




Electra and Other Plays


Book Description

Provides translation of four Greek dramas by Sophocles.




The Electra Plays


Book Description

Aeschylus: The Libation Bearers; Euripides: Electra; Sophocles: Electra







New Testament Survey


Book Description

Before coming to grips with an individual verse or passage in the New Testament, Bible students and expositors must understand how it relates to the theme of the book. This nontechnical survey offers readers a working understanding of the New Testament by providing the theological tools necessary to synthesize biblical passages into themes. It incorporates historical and cultural backgrounds without becoming a book on manners and customs and deals with the actual text of Scripture without becoming a verse-by-verse commentary. Pictures, charts, and outlines aid comprehension. This classic text, which has served students well for many years, is now available in paperback.




General Catalogue


Book Description







T.P.'s Weekly


Book Description




Women of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television


Book Description

Samantha Stephens in Bewitched. Lieutenant Uhura on Star Trek. Wonder Woman, Xena, Warrior Princess, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and many more. Television's women of science fiction and fantasy are iconic and unforgettable yet there hasn't been a reference book devoted to them until now. Covering 400 female characters from 200 series since the 1950s, this encyclopedic work celebrates the essential contributions of women to science fiction and fantasy TV, with characters who run the gamut from superheroes, extraterrestrials and time travelers to witches, vampires and mere mortals who deal with the fantastic in their daily lives.