The Double Axe by Philip Womack - review by Imogen Russell Williams

Imogen Russell Williams

Bull’s in Your Court

The Double Axe

By

Alma Books 242pp £6.99
 

Philip Womack’s novels have always woven classical legend with dark, compelling children’s fantasies set in the contemporary world. In The Double Axe he retreats fully into the dense shadows of classical antiquity to retell the Minotaur myth from the perspective of a teenage Cretan prince. This choice of subject has paid off richly.

Prince Deucalion Stephanos of Crete (known as Stephan), King Minos’s second son, has looked up to Androgeos, his older brother, all his life. But when Androgeos is murdered in Athens, a terrible price must be paid – a blood price, according to Myrrah, the fearsome high priestess who sees auguries in the split carcasses of sacrificial beasts. Myrrah has already called down a curse upon the House of Minos: ‘The stench of darkness is in your minds. And none of you – none of you – will escape it.’ Suddenly elevated to the status of heir and regent, Stephan is acutely conscious of himself as young, unproved and second best. With the help of his resourceful sister Ari, however, he is determined to balk the curse, sift the truth from the court’s poisonous mist of rumour, and find his way to the heart of Myrrah’s mystery.

Womack’s language contains repeated phrases that resonate like Homeric formulae (the mysterious ‘lines filled with blood’, for instance, that reveal themselves, at length, to be the grooves and passages of the labyrinth itself). It creates a chiaroscuro vision of bright joy and suffocating darkness, reminiscent of Mary Renault’s earlier Theseus

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