Greek mythology
Trojan Cycle
The most superb and terrible cycle of the Greek epic, recomposed from the Iliad and the Odyssey, as well as from the classical tragedies and the lost poems only preserved in fragments, scholia and summaries.
Troy 1:
The Elopement of Helen
First Edition: april 2016
The causes and initial episodes of the Trojan War, chronicled in the lost poem Cyprias.
Troy 4:
Ulysses, the Man of many Devices
First Edition: August 2016
Completing the portrait of the most modern of the Greek heroes, according to Cyprias, the Little Iliad and the Sophocles tragedy Philoctetes.
Troy 2:
The Descent of the Achaeans
First Edition: January 2018
Political motives and human taboos, according to Cyprias and the Euripides tragedy Iphigenia in Aulide.
Troy 5:
The Fall of Troy
First Edition: May 2016
The tragic end of the cycle is chronicled in the Little Iliad and Iliupersis, completed here with Triphiodorus The Storming of Ilium.
Troy 3:
The Fury of Achilles
First Edition: October 2016
The facts of the Iliad --founding epic poem of Western literature--, completed with fragments of Cyprias and Ethiopian.
Troy 6:
The voyages of Ulysses
First Edition: september 2016
Gredos Bookstore Edition: february 2018
RBA Libros Bookstore Edition: May 2019
One of the most famous literary works of all time, the Odyssey, supplemented here with the Returns (Nostoi) and the Telegony.
Theogony
Interpretation in contemporary narrative form of the myths that explain the origins of cosmos and the lineage of the Greek mythology gods. According to its most ancient version, as presented by Hesiod in the seminal poetoc work of Greco-Roman literature entitled Theogony («Origin of the gods«).
Theogony 1: Zeus conquers Olympus
First Edition: August 2016
Gredos Bookstore Edition: february 2018
Greek cosmogony, birth of the gods and fight of the Olympians against the Titans, the mythological tale known as the Titanomachy.
Theogony 2: Rise of the Giants
First Edition: January 2017
The Gigantomachy closes the great Greek cosmogonic cycle with the explanation of the order of the world, which responds to the constant struggle that civilization endures against barbarism.