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For weeks, Lysis had been counting on going to the play-the new play
by Euripides that everyone in Athens is talking about. It was to be
performed for the first time at the theater of Dionysius on the
Acropolis, and Father had promised to take him to see it.
And then, the day before they were to go, one of Father's ships is
wrecked at Samos. And since shipwrecked goods were claimed be whoever
found them first, Father has to leave immediately to try to save some of
his cargo. "Of course I can't take you to the play now," he says to
Lysis. But because his sister, Callisto, sympathizes with Lysis and
cares so much when she hears of his disappointment, she sacrifices her
most precious possession to the goddess Athena, and Lysis sees the play
after all. But Lysis finds a way for Callisto to go, too, breaking the
norms of Greek society.
This gentle and timeless story, motivated by sibling loyalty,
explores the roles of boys and girls, children and adults in pagan
Athens. Athenian slaves and citizens come into focus. The pantheon of
Greek gods, goddesses and heroes are seen through the eyes of these
children.