A blog based on the novel, PENELOPE'S DAUGHTER, which is dedicated "to all the children left behind when fathers and mothers go off to war"
When my father, Odysseus, and his men sailed off to the Trojan War, they were confident their gods favored a quick victory. Instead, the siege of Troy lasted ten years. After Troy fell, the survivors made their way home to Sparta, Mycenae, Pylos, and elsewhere in the ancient Peloponnese. Neither my father nor any of his troops arrived home with the rest. We waited for years as the news grew worse. Odysseus was dead, we were told,or imprisoned, or, worst yet, he had married another woman and abandoned my mother Penelope, my brother Telemachus, and me.
If he is alive somewhere, his thoughts may wander to Penelope and Telemachus, but he won’t be thinking of me. I am the daughter he doesn’t know exists. Odysseus went off to the Trojan War when his son, Telemachus, was barely old enough to walk. His wife, Penelope, was a teenage bride, and is now a young wife, mother, and queen who has to try to rule Ithaca without him.
I was born seven months after he left. I am a hero’s daughter and a princess of his realm, but I have lived my entire life without a father. I’m nineteen now, and still waiting.
All over the world, and throughout history children grow up as I have. This website will focus on the children of those men and women who have gone off to fight America's wars, and provide information and resources for all who care about military families and want to help.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
"A Safe Place at School"
Friday, September 24, 2010
The Suffering We Can't See
Thursday, September 23, 2010
The Neighborhood We Live In
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
GI Junior Scholarships
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Going to School, Virtually
Monday, September 20, 2010
How the Brass See It
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Measuring Up at Home
A lengthy article in the National Journal, entitled “When the Troops Come Home” showed up in my in email inbox today, and it is going to take a while to absorb everything in it. I’ll probably be blogging about the issues it raises for a while as I think about each in turn. One of the things I noticed immediately was the candor with which some of the interviewees talked about what it was like to have a service member back after deployment.