***Series Spoilers below!!***
I really loved the way Gemmell rationalised so much of The Iliad legend into a viable history, and how he connected other major events together with it - not least the destruction of Thera, and of Moses.
Troy: Lord of the Silver Bow started especially well - loved the character of Odyssues - but I found the battle towards the end a little tiring, and it was if I was reading a repeat of Legend.
Troy: Shield of Thunder was even better - brimming with intrigue and character, especially Kassandra and Halysia, and the general workings of Troy. Also, Banockles.
But Troy: Fall of Kings really tested my patience. There's a long section in the middle of the book which is just minor characters fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting and fighting - none of which is very significant.
Some of the deviations from The Iliad were also frustrating - the Trojan Horse and Wooden Horse meanings were clever, but the fight between Achilles and Hecktor was a disappointment, not least that Achilles was poisoned, rather than dragged Hecktor's body around the walls - which was a major part of The Iliad. I also expected the love triangle between Hecktor, Helikaon, and Andromache, to contribute to Hecktor's defeat, but it didn't seem to come up during the fight.
I also got frustrated with the character development - Xander never really does anything or wants anything; Odysseus rails about how terrible it is to side with Agamemnon and then designs his battles; Andromache never seems to have developed into a mother - she barely has any maternal feelings, instead remaining wholly focused on Helikaon. And Khalkeus simply dies, having achieved nothing with his iron smithing.
There's too much of characters wandering about, simply observing what's happening for the reader - and repeating and repeating things for the reader who hadn't read the two previous books.
Also, the Thera and Moses storylines just come in suddenly at the end, without any real development - the entire series started with Gerhsom - surely we could have seen a bit more of him in the third book, other than a single POV scene at the end?
Overall, I really enjoyed the first two books, and hoped for great things from the third. But it really did have an unfinished quality to it. Of course, the death of David Gemmell is more than excuse enough for that. I just found the third book somewhat disappointing, compared to the peak of the second book.
Despite that complaint, IMO David Gemmell still remains my favourite author, and one of the best fantasy writers - his worst writing is comparable to the best of other authors. However, Troy has a more epic cast list than his usual stories, and I can't help but feel that he struggled to keep focus with such a complex work.