The smaller of twins, born long after two elder brothers, Leonidas was considered an afterthought from birth -- even by his mother.
Visit her website at www.helena-schrader.com or learn more about Sparta from her website Sparta Reconsidered at www.elysiumgates.com/ helena..
She has combined her research with common sense and a deep understanding of human nature to create a refreshingly unorthodox portrayal of Spartan society in this biographical trilogy of Leonidas, as well as in her three previously published novels, The Olympic Charioteer , Are They Singing in Sparta? and Spartan Slave, Spartan Queen .
Helena has done extensive research on ancient and archaic Sparta.
She has published four nonfiction works on modern history and has been published in academic journals including Sparta: Journal of Ancient Spartan and Greek History .
Schrader holds a PhD in history from the University of Hamburg, which she earned with her groundbreaking biography of General Friedrich Olbricht, the mastermind behind the Valkyrie plot against Hitler.
About the Author Helena P.
The second will focus on his years as an ordinary citizen, and the third will describe his reign and death.
This first book describes his childhood in the infamous Spartan agoge.
This is the first book in a trilogy of biographical novels about Leonidas of Sparta.
But these were formative years that would one day make him the most famous Spartan of them all: the hero of Thermopylae.
Struggling to survive without disgrace, he never expected that one day he would be king or chosen to command the combined Greek forces fighting a Persian invasion.
Barefoot, always a little hungry, and subject to harsh discipline, Leonidas had to prove himself worthy of Spartan citizenship.
Lucky not to be killed for being undersized, he was not raised as a prince like his eldest brother, Cleomenes, who was heir to the throne, but instead had to endure the harsh upbringing of ordinary Spartan youth.
The smaller of twins, born long after two elder brothers, Leonidas was considered an afterthought from birth -- even by his mother