Monday, May 4, 2026

Son of Nobody


 Perhaps the author of Son of Nobody could qualify as the most interesting man in the world. He is also the author of the amazing Life of Pi. I looked for my review of Life of Pi, but it was not in the blog, so who knows what happened to that. Son of Nobody has a very different feel, but I also think it addresses some of the same themes about self-worth, society, and identity. Also, I have a fascination with ancient Greek literature, and this novel dives directly into that. If you’ve got little interest in the Iliad, then you might struggle with this book even though that’s not really critical to see the author’s main them.

In the novel, the protagonist Harlow Donne is a classical scholar. Living in Canada, he had the chance go to England to look at some papyrus fragments at Oxford University, and he took the opportunity where he made the discovery of his life. The papyrus fragments were from an account of the Trojan War, a contemporary work to the Iliad by Homer. This book is historical fiction, but it’s also about the fictional author’s psychological journey about his own life. While he is at Oxford, Donne’s troubled marriage is further damaged and his little girl, Helen, has a brief and fatal illness. Like characters in his book, Donne was displaced from the place he lived but he was compelled to continue his seemingly important work.

Martel’s fictitious author Donne had previously never achieved any fame for his scholarly work. In Oxford, Donne translated the writings of the unknown author of the papyrus fragments which he named the Psoad. The author of those fragments was given the name Psoas, who was nothing  more than a common foot soldier with the Trojans, also a seemingly unimportant person. Thus, we actually have a protagonist writing about a protagonist. Rather than being a history book, this was really a story about a person who is defined without lineage or family history. In one review that I read, it was noted that Martel seemed to be asking, “If a person has no inherited story, must they invent one – and does that invention become truth?”

Most interestingly, in this newly discovered material that has been at the heart of so many dramas over the last couple millenias, Martel then invented areas in which the Iliad and Psoad describe events the same way and areas in which their accounts differed significantly. He even put Homer and Psoas at the same location on one day.

The Trojan-Greek war which lasted for 10 years is apparently a reality. The destruction of Troy left what must have been the wealthiest city in the world at the time in total ruin. Martel suggestsed that while true, the war itself was absurd from the perspective of both sides. The costs of the war were horrendous for both the Greeks and the Trojans, supposedly because of the abduction of Helen, which may not have been an abduction at all. It’s my plan to read this book again at a future date. I think this is a very well-written and important novel.

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