Mark Knowles, Argo (Head of Zeus 2022)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58327073-argo?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=kbFC4gIOE7&rank=3
1230 BCE Iolkos, Thessaly. A stranger arrives to compete in King Pelias’ Games, wearing only one sandal. The man, his nephew Jason, was supposed to have been killed as a child. Now, Jason wants the kingdom. Pelias sets him an impossible task—steal the Golden Fleece of Colchis.
The early chapters feature vignettes where we successively meet the Argonauts—all our favourites: Castor and Pollux, Orpheus, Herakles. With his mighty allies, Jason sets sail. A captain among established heroes, he has some teething troubles establishing his command. He needs not only to steal the Fleece, he also needs to become a leader.
The plot roughly follows Apollonius of Rhodes, minus the supernatural elements.
The crew are seduced by the man-less women of Lemnos, experience the mysteries of the old gods with the Kabeiroi (a cult associated with Hephaestus) on Samothrace, fight various Black Sea tribes, rescue Phineus from the Harpies (scavenging birds). The dragonteeth army is here substituted by Sirakian warriors.
One of the Argonauts, Herakles, is a hero of the Bronze Age, winning prowess by brute force. Jason is a new man (for 13th C BC), a hero for the Iron Age, a man of trade not conquest, who uses his brains not his brawn. As if to acknowledge that his day is done, Herakles is parted from the company, leaving the venture to the wiles of Jason.
For a tale which introduced the world to a new sort of hero, Jason doesn’t always occupy centre stage in Knowles’ version, and in the end it’s the wiles of the princess, Medea, that wins the Fleece.
This is a modern retelling of the ancient myth, but Knowles’ background in the Classics, archaeology and even antique shipcraft is evident.
The novel ends with a ‘to be continued’, so I assume we will read more of Jason and Medea.
This review was written for Historical Novels Review.









