Selected Product: | The Odyssey (Penguin Classics) Paperback Author: Homer Publisher: Penguin Classics Release Date: 2006-10-31 ISBN-10: 0143039954 ISBN-13: 9780143039952 List Price: $15.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Mythology ISBN-10: 0316341517 ISBN-13: 9780316341516 List Price:$13.99 Romeo and Juliet (Folger Shakespeare Library) ISBN-10: 0743477111 ISBN-13: 9780743477116 List Price:$5.99 The Iliad (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition) ISBN-10: 0140275363 ISBN-13: 9780140275360 List Price:$17.00 The Odyssey (Cliffs Notes) ISBN-10: 0764585991 ISBN-13: 0785555026421 List Price:$5.99 The Odyssey (Cliffs Notes) ISBN-10: 0764585991 ISBN-13: 9780764585999 List Price:$5.99 The Iliad (Penguin Classics) ISBN-10: 0140447946 ISBN-13: 9780140447941 List Price:$12.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Odyssey (Penguin Classics) by Homer (ISBN-10: 0143039954, ISBN-13: 9780143039952). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Odyssey (Penguin Classics) by Homer (ISBN-10: 0143039954, ISBN-13: 9780143039952). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Robert Fagles’s stunning modern-verse translation—available at last in our black-spine classics line
The Odyssey is literature’s grandest evocation of everyman’s journey through life. In the myths and legends that are retold here, renowned translator Robert Fagles has captured the energy and poetry of Homer’s original in a bold, contemporary idiom and given us an Odyssey to read aloud, to savor, and to treasure for its sheer lyrical mastery. This is an Odyssey to delight both the classicist and the general reader, and to captivate a new generation of Homer’s students. A classic | Customer Rating: | | A very long book, but quite interesting and will keep you wanting to pick it up again. The English translation is well done and provides a strong basis for many lessons that hold true today. This tale holds such a strong fix in our popular culture that this reading is highly recommended for all high school students. | Great story, horrible translation | Customer Rating: | | As a scholar of Homeric Greek I would avoid this translation at all costs. It may be very well written as far as narrative ease is concerned, but it absolutely doesn't follow the original text in either wording or meaning. | Stick with Rieu's original... | Customer Rating: | (I'm not sure why amazon has over half of these reviews for Fagels's translation on Rieu's page? I noticed this happening quite a bit on amazon, but anyway...)
I have spent quite a bit of time comparing versions of "The Odyssey", and out of all of them I settled on Rieu's pioneering translation.
It was originally published in 1946 as Penguin's very first book!
He would recite "The Odyssey" from the original Greek to his wife and children during the second world war in London while bombs dropped around them. It was Rieu's wish to start a publishing company that dealt with reviving the classics for common man. Penguin Classics is now the most widely loved, read and utilized editions on the market! What a vision he had!
This edition of The Odyssey was revised by his son in 1991 and reprinted with a better print and layout in 2002. It still carries a type of "joie de vivre" all throughout, a wonderful raciness, and a strength of believablity.
...as good as the revised one is, I actually prefer Rieu's original more because of the humble human language he uses...which has mostly been taken away.
| = | Customer Rating: | | The reason some stories remain classics is simply because they deserve it. This ancient story is as exciting, sexy, and romantic as they possible come and that is simply how it should be. Post-Iliad comes the perilous journey back to Greece, a journey that lasts twenty years through every horrible (and yet totally cool thing) that could ever happen. It's passionate, fun, and exciting and I guess that is why they make us read all of it in high school. Well, yay! | Older and Wiser | Customer Rating: | | While the story is fictional and full of all the joys and horrors of life, I am, at my later years finding that this text, the bible, and roman mythology have so much in common as to stimulate our minds, conceptions, and views without reducing our individual religious beliefs. The tales compliment and in some small way confirm each of mankinds dealing with the unknown at that period of history. To have the background of reading the Bible, Homer, Romans, Voltaire, etc. is to truly come to grips with an individual religion and God, versus, a rote learned Higher Power. |
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