Rating:  Summary: A Greek bearing gifts Review: "The Odyssey" takes up the story of "The Iliad", but not quite from where "The Iliad" ended. Years have passed since the end of the Trojan War, and Odysseus is still absent without leave from Ithaca. A plague of Suitors beset his kingdom (and his wife Penelope). Odysseus' son, Telemachus, decides he's fed up of waiting for his father's return, and sets out to discover what happened to him.In the meantime, Odysseus is making his way back to Ithaca, albeit by a long and dangerous route. Will he make it? Will Telemachus find him? Will they get back to Ithaca in time to save the kingdom and Penelope's honour? The reader also learns more about the course of the Trojan War after "The Iliad" ended. The past is unrolled in snippets, and not in a simple chronological order - the reader, along with the characters, has to piece together what went on as other characters in the book tell of their personal experiences. I thought that this was great stuff - entertaining as an adventure story, at times comic, yet reflective upon universal and timeless problems facing each of us as we struggle with life's vagaries. And of course, there's a great cast list of Greek mythology's baddies - Polyphemus, Scylla and Charybdis, Poseidon and so on. G Rodgers
Rating:  Summary: An epic odyssey Review: After so many people have said so much over countless centuries about Homer's "Odyssey," what is left for me to say? In this review I will not so much attempt to review the work itself as the translation. Suffice to say that it is a grand adventure that should not be missed. but average modern readers may miss it, being weary of reading it as poetry or are simply intimidated by its age. If you are one of those people, fear not! W.H.D. Rouse's prose translation brings The Odyssey to the masses with flair. Reading it for school this year, I was a bit apprehensive of it at first, but eager to see what was so great about it. I needn't have been apprehensive at all. The prose reads just as well as modern novels, and the feeling and adventure of the book is well captured. For those who don't know, this is the story of what became of Odysseus after he fought in the Trojan War (which is chronicled in The Iliad.) Several obstacles, including the wrath of Posiden, Greek god of the sea, bar him from returning home, where savage men, under the impression that he has died at war, consume his posessions and woo his wife. Watch as he braves these obstacles with the help of the goddess Athena so that he may return home and punish the insolent wooers. While it's slow to start off, give it time -- at its best, The Odyssey is riviting, and it's obvious why it has been able to stand the test of time and is regarded as a classic. The action is exciting and will leave you breathless, but also there is humanity and real emotion here. All of that is perfectly captured in Rouse's translation, and he brings it accross to the reader with a remarkable strength and deftness. Reading it, it's as if you re being told the story orally (which, as Rouse notes in his preface, is how it was originally intended by Homer), and all of the energy of a live storytelling is present. I commend Rouse for his work, and thank him for bringing me The Odyssey. When you read it, you will, too!
Rating:  Summary: An epic odyssey Review: After so many people have said so much over countless centuries about Homer's "Odyssey," what is left for me to say? In this review I will not so much attempt to review the work itself as the translation. Suffice to say that it is a grand adventure that should not be missed. but average modern readers may miss it, being weary of reading it as poetry or are simply intimidated by its age. If you are one of those people, fear not! W.H.D. Rouse's prose translation brings The Odyssey to the masses with flair. Reading it for school this year, I was a bit apprehensive of it at first, but eager to see what was so great about it. I needn't have been apprehensive at all. The prose reads just as well as modern novels, and the feeling and adventure of the book is well captured. For those who don't know, this is the story of what became of Odysseus after he fought in the Trojan War (which is chronicled in The Iliad.) Several obstacles, including the wrath of Posiden, Greek god of the sea, bar him from returning home, where savage men, under the impression that he has died at war, consume his posessions and woo his wife. Watch as he braves these obstacles with the help of the goddess Athena so that he may return home and punish the insolent wooers. While it's slow to start off, give it time -- at its best, The Odyssey is riviting, and it's obvious why it has been able to stand the test of time and is regarded as a classic. The action is exciting and will leave you breathless, but also there is humanity and real emotion here. All of that is perfectly captured in Rouse's translation, and he brings it accross to the reader with a remarkable strength and deftness. Reading it, it's as if you re being told the story orally (which, as Rouse notes in his preface, is how it was originally intended by Homer), and all of the energy of a live storytelling is present. I commend Rouse for his work, and thank him for bringing me The Odyssey. When you read it, you will, too!
Rating:  Summary: What can I say? Review: Anybody who can give "The Odyssey" negative ratings, except for those criticizing the translation, have a serious brain defect. This is considered one the greatest books ever written, folks. No, I am not a tenured professor of English or anything like that, but to all of those students out there in high school or college, here's a story to which you can relate. I read "The Odyssey" in my sophmore year of high school and hated it. I never thought that a mere three years later I would come to appreciate this great masterpiece as much as I did. In my freshmen year of college I was "forced" to read this book for my freshmen English class and I realized how much I had grown up between the age of 16 and 18. Don't forsake this book. It is a masterpiece that will survive the test of history for thousands of years to come.
Rating:  Summary: This is not Jason and the Golden Fleece Review: Despite the similarities, this is not the tale of Jason and his quest for the golden fleece. This earlier work has many similarities, but if you are not a student of ancient Greece, avoid this book. For entertainment value, read about Jason instead.
Rating:  Summary: Home, by way of every where else Review: For ten years after the sack of Troy, Odysseus wanders around the Medditerainian Sea trying to get home. I liked this Homer tale a little better than I did "Iliad". That is because this one has more monsters, more mythic happenings than the war story. Not that it's a bad book, but I liked this one because it is more a complete story, with a begining, a definiate end. I find it hard to critisize a classic, so I won't; I'll just say that this is one of the best stories, certainly one of my favorites, and it has stood the test of time.
Rating:  Summary: Doesn't live up to its reputation Review: I read this epic in English my freshman year of high school. I had heard many great things about this classic, but was sorely disappointed. It is repetitive, there is little to no character development, and each book (kind of like a chapter) is practically the same story line. Perhaps this edition is a bad translation. I might try the Fitzgerald one. A note: I think it's time we get some modern books into school curriculum. Just because they are considered classics doesn't mean they are any good by today's standards.
Rating:  Summary: Read the Odyssey!! Review: I'm 14, live in England and I'm studying the Odyssey for my GCSE in Classical Civilisation, and its a fantastic book. It's amazing to think that this whole story was once MEMORISED by Homer, and because it was so wonderful it was finally written down and has survived for years and years! The Odyssey is a great story because: although it's a mythical tale, Homer tells it with such reality and vivid description that you almost believe it's real, it's filled with excitement, twists and turns, with Odysseus always just about managing to escape from trouble! The intriging mythical creatures are fascinating, full of character and personality - i particularly like Polyphemus the Cyclops and also Athena, the wise goddess. that's another cool thing about the Odyssey - all of the ancient Greek names!! Although the Odyssey is a challenging book to read, due to the complicated people and place names, the long family histories and references to Greek mythology, and the repetitive narration, I would recommend it to anyone. Whether or not you want to analyse it in detail (as I have to for my exam!) or just read it and it enjoy it, everyone should read the Odyssey at least once! I find that each time I read it, I pick up something new, and it gets easier to understand and quicker to read. Just give it a try, it is a classics book, and well worth the effort, although it is challenging. I'm sure that anyone who is interested in mythology, or just adventure stories in general, something in the Odyssey will appeal to you. So read it!!!
Rating:  Summary: An amazing novel Review: The Odyssey is an amazing novel. The story is awesome and the translation by Albert Cook is great. This novel is great because it gives us a look at what ancient Greece was like. They valued marriage, they expected women to stay at home, that men would die in battle, on the sea, or raiding other people, and also that something that was unexplainable was due to the gods.
This novel is a great adventure. The Odyssey begins by showing Odysseus to us through the words of Meneloas and Nester. Then we are brought to Odysseus and learn his plight. We see him released after seven years of living with a goddess. When he is rescued again, we learn of his voyages since leaving Troy and the reason that one particular god is so angry with him. Once his story is told, his rescuers bring him to his fatherland. He then takes vengence on those who had ravaged his home while he was away, and he is reunited with his faithful wife Penelope.
As well as being a great insight to Greek life, this novel is a great story that I look forward to reading again. I highly recommend it.
Rating:  Summary: An amazing tale Review: The Odyssey is an amazing tale of the travels of Odysseus and his crew after the Trojan War. His encounters with the Cyclops, sea monsters, Sirens, Gods, and ghosts create a tale larger than life. Mr. Rouse does an amazing job of translating the tale in a way that flows well and reads easily. My only complaint of this classic is the ending... in 1 1/2 pages things go from nearly a civil war to peace. It appears almost as if homer had not finished the tale before his death, and someone else added the ending just to finish the book. Aside from the ending, the entire book is a masterpiece of ancient literature.
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