Helen of Troy, 1993 Poems

Maria Zoccola, 1993-

Book - 2025

Part myth retelling, part character study, this debut poetry collection reimagines the mythic beauty from Homer's "Iliad" as a disgruntled housewife in 1990s Tennessee. Zoccola explores Helen's isolation and rebellion as her expansive personality clashes with the social rigidity of a small town: she marries the wrong man, gives birth to a child she is not ready to parent, and begins an affair that throws her life into chaos, but she never surrenders ownership of her story or her choices.

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Subjects
Genres
poetry
Historical poetry
Poetry
Published
New York : Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Maria Zoccola, 1993- (author)
Edition
First Scribner trade paperback edition
Item Description
"Scribner Poetry"
Physical Description
ix, 78 pages : genealogical tables ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781668046333
  • Helen of troy feuds with the neighborhood
  • Helen of troy makes an entrance
  • Helen of troy calls her sister
  • Helen of troy in february
  • The spartan women discuss the local waterfowl
  • Helen of troy's new whirlpool washing machine
  • About the affair
  • Helen of troy is asked to the spring formal
  • (interlude: the swan describes the next hour)
  • Helen of troy tells her mother it's a graduation girl and drives alone to the clinic in nashville
  • The spartan women discuss the big cheese
  • Helen of troy meets the big cheese
  • Helen of troy catalogues her pregnancy cravings
  • Helen of troy in the delivery ward
  • Helen of troy avoids her school reunion
  • Helen of troy cranks the volume on "like a prayer" ballet studio parking lot
  • Helen of troy watches Jurassic park in theaters
  • The spartan women discuss the family
  • Helen of troy gets the news from her sister
  • (interlude: the swan describes the harvest)
  • Helen of troy surfs the net
  • Another thing about the affair
  • Helen of troy folds laundry in a dim room
  • Helen of troy runs the station wagon into a ditch
  • Helen of troy recovers at st. francis
  • Helen of troy cleans up after the barbecue
  • And another thing about the affair
  • The spartan women discuss tennessee
  • (interlude: the swan describes an invasive species)
  • Helen of troy goes parking with the defensive tackle
  • Helen of troy runs to piggly wiggly
  • About the affair again
  • (interlude: the swan describes the war)
  • One more thing about the affair
  • The spartan women discuss the stranger
  • Helen of troy returns to sparta
  • Helen of troy joins the ice fishing trip
  • One last thought on the affair
  • Helen of troy's turn to judge
  • (interlude; the swan describes the ouroboros)
  • Helen of troy catches reruns
  • Helen of troy recalls the tenth date
  • Helen of troy honeymoons on st. John
  • The spartan women discuss the kid
  • Helen of troy reigns over chuck e. cheese
  • Helen of troy makes peace with the kudzu
  • The end of the affair
  • Helen of troy explains to the gods
  • The spartan women discuss helen of troy
  • Helen of troy plants near the mailbox
  • Afterword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Zoccola's exceptional debut, The Iliad's Helen of Troy is reimagined as a wistful Tennessee housewife, dissatisfied with her marriage and wasted potential and reliving the glory days of her youth. If the premise sounds contrived, the execution delivers something unexpectedly magical. Helen's life is far from stereotypically bereft, as evidenced in the hilariously histrionic "helen of troy runs to piggly wiggly": "the pig is the place where all desire/ is consummated, each want made fat, made starch, made bone-in-flesh... sing, muse, of the manager's special, two-for-one on yogurt cups,/ little debbies leaping for the cart." The narrative through line involves Helen having an affair but ultimately returning to her husband (whom she refers to throughout as "the big cheese") and daughter. She speaks in the aftermath of the affair of wanting more for her child than she has had: "gods of birds// who speak in human voices, i do not want to watch/ her walk through a life of small mercies and small choices./ I want each tooth spit up clean and delivered to her palm/ to plant as she chooses." Zoccola provides a winning combination of humor and enough pathos to make Homer proud. Accessible yet deep, this will be adored by seasoned poetry fans and casual readers alike. (Jan.)

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