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Book Review

Publisher's Note:

The only guidebook you need for your next time travel vacation! The Thrifty Guide to the Ancient Greece: A Handbook for Time Travelers is a snappy, informative travel guide containing information vital to the sensible time traveler: * How can I find a decent tunic that won't break my bank account? * Where can I score cheap theater tickets in ancient Athens? * What do I do if I'm being attacked by an army of one million Persians? This two-color book is filled with humorous maps, reviews of places to stay and top attractions (Don't miss the first-ever Olympics!), and tips on who to have lunch with (Alexander the Great and his horse, Bucephalus, naturally). If you had a time travel machine and could take a vacation anywhere in history, this is the only guidebook you would need.…

This review may contain affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase using these links, then Compass Book Ratings may earn a small commission.

Overall Book Review:

The Thrifty Guide to Ancient Greece is a fun book. It introduces the reader to many social, historical, and literary aspects of Greek culture, while not delving heavily into any one subject. This approach gives the reader a high-level overview of the subject which could spark an interest in one particular facet for further study or enjoyment, a strategy that I think makes it a particularly good read for children.

This book is well-written. The language is witty, the jokes are funny, and the subject is thoroughly-researched. The stories and topics were obviously selected to appeal to children due to either their shocking or funny nature or, in a very few cases, simple gross-out factor, but they are so interesting and unusual that an adult can enjoy them as well. In addition to the major events of Greek history, minor side-items are included that even adults will likely find new and informative, unless the adult is an expert in ancient history.

Since the book is told in the form of a time-travel tour guidebook, it also contains a few tid bits of future “history” and references to events after ancient Greece. It includes footnotes about products offered by the time-travel business and some notes from the CEO. Overall, these are funny, but at points, the notes referencing the CEO’s greed and shady dealings, or the poor working conditions at the corporation, are tiresome. The clever digs at corporate corruption are snicker-worthy, but after a few of them, the reader may feel that the point has been made and enough is enough. Also, it seems unlikely that children, who make up the target audience, will understand the references or find them nearly as funny as do the adults who find their way to this book.

Overall, this is a good book, which may inspire children to find out more about this history stuff. Adults who read it will probably enjoy it, as well.

Review of an Advance Reader Copy

This book was sent to Compass Book Ratings for review by Viking Books for Young Readers

Content Analysis:

Profanity/Language: 2 religious exclamations.

Violence/Gore:  Many historical characters are killed; a character threatens to kill another; martial arts contests are held; laws are written in human blood; students are hit with sticks as discipline; slaves are hunted and killed for sport; boys are whipped for entertainment; several references to how a character could be killed in ancient Greece; characters wear helmets made of decapitated animal heads; reference to wiping up blood with a towel; people and animals die of exhaustion; many (tens or hundreds of thousands) of people die in battles; a character is nearly killed in an athletic event; characters are whipped; a decapitated head is displayed on a pole; citizens, including children and babies, are killed and cities/property destroyed in war; a character’s hands are chopped off; a building is damaged by an explosion; a character is beaten and tortured before being killed; a parent tries to kill their child with a sword; a few characters commit suicide; a character dies of disease; a character is poisoned. References to disturbing social practices such as: exposure/killing of infants; disciplining children by exposing them to the elements; older children beating up younger children as punishment; eating a food made out of blood. Mythological stories contain things such as: A character eats another character whole; a character’s head is split open. 

Note:  All violence and gore is in a historical context, not described as if it is happening, like violence in a fiction work would be, and none is detailed or graphic.

Sex/Nudity:  Mention of someone looking for a date; children are naked as part of discipline (no sexual connotation); characters exercise and compete in sports naked (mentioned a few times); a female character in an illustration wears a top that almost reveals her breast; a character runs down the street naked; a thirteen-year-old girl is married; a male historical character has a boyfriend; a character has a few wives and hundreds of concubines. Mythological stories contain: Incest (among deities); marital infidelity with many partners.

Mature Subject Matter:

Infanticide, gender discrimination, child abuse, slavery, corporate greed (numerous jokes about this), war, fortune telling, theft, assassination, underage marriage (brief mention), homosexuality (brief mention), piracy, kidnapping, torture, starvation, disease.

Alcohol / Drug Use:

Brandy and rat poison is used as a medication; adults drink wine and beer; one character is an alcoholic.

Overall Book Rating
Profanity/Language
Rating:
1
10
Violence/Gore
Rating:
3
10
Sex/Nudity
Rating:
3
10

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About the Reviewer

My taste in literature leans heavily towards sci-fi, fantasy, and (my favorite) horror, and the latter can present some fairly murky waters for parents to let their children explore. I enjoy novels of both the standard and graphic varieties. Since those genres, and graphic novels in particular, tend to appeal to boys, I hope that I can help other Boy Mommies in their quest to find books that their little video gamers--I mean, future bibliophiles will read and enjoy. When I am not reading, I enjoy tabletop role-playing games, video games, and singing karaoke. I have a wonderful husband who lets me indulge my reading habit by sharing the housework and being a great dad to our genius kids and their faithful hound.