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Loading... Homer's the Iliad and the Odyssey: A Biography (Books That Changed the…by Alberto ManguelSeries: Books that Changed the World (9)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A collection of essays and commentary, this is best read with the original works by Homer. Alberto Manguel is an excellent guide. ( )Not a snappy title I agree but a very informative and inspiring survey of the influence of Homer on the Western Canon. Reminded me of a Verlaine poem I liked and of a Borges story that's really something special. Most astonishing fact of the day: Alexander Pope completed a translation of Homer without knowing any Greek and hardly any Latin. No one seemed to care about this small deficiency as the book sold in droves and made him an extremely wealthy man. Gibbon described the work as having, "every merit except that of likeness to the original." A fair cop really, considering. I enjoy the content of the book very much and find it great fun. The narrator, though, comes close to destroying the book from my point of view. He reads as though he were reading the nightly news on television. Book, 5 stars, Narrator, 2 stars. (this review is about the audiobook) After the strange, gasping fascination with which I read the Iliad recently, I felt like I had to know more. Like I didn't want to forget the shape of it and the Odyssey, like I needed to understand the way the archetypes from misty, almost pre-historic Greece influence our metaphorical view of ourselves through the ages. And, viola! Manguel's treatment and investigation in this "biography" (as it were--of the poems, not the poet) is a work of adoration, sensuous and nested with complexity. It's really a book that's a bit beyond me. The more I try to be well-read, the more I realize I am not, and here again I am reminded. Manguel bounces Homer off of Pope, Milton, Dante, Joyce, Tennyson. What I see this book as is as a gate--a viewport to the things I can learn about and read next; a guide to the interconnectedness of epics throughout time. Sometimes Manguel's chapters wax into pure philosophy, at which I glaze over sometimes--my own weakness. But what a wonderful context-builder! no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 00:30:20 -0500)
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