I also saw how far they would go to please the Gods or even the dead. One of these instances, was when the Greeks gathered on a beach, and there was a lack of wind for months, a year at most. They thought that the cause of the void of wind was an angered Goddess. So, they sacrificed a king’s daughter to appease the Goddess, so they could sail to Troy. This made me aggravated at the Greeks. I know it's their religion, but the way they got the king’s daughter out there was what made me really upset. They told the king’s wife that they were going to marry her off to Achilles. So, the daughter went to them thinking that she was to be married instead, they grabbed her and sacrificed her. Her father just watched it happen without trying to stop it. The situation confused me and angered me at the same time. How could a father just let his daughter die right in front of him? Why would Gods and wars be more important than your family? He played it off like it was normal and that he should be thanked for pleasing the Gods. I cannot believe this happened in the past.
Something else I hated in this book is the actions of Achilles’s son, and he was in the book for only a chapter and a half. Achilles's son, Neoptolemus or Pyrrhus for short. He comes into the story and acts like he’s all high and mighty. He also thinks he knows his father and his wishes when he has not met him before. The thing I hate the most about him is that he would not allow Patroclus to be known after his death. Achilles had his ashes mixed with Patroclus because he loved him, but his son just thought Patroclus was a slave who did not deserve a monument. He throws