The Odyssey

Front Cover
Tantor Media Incorporated, May 9, 2014 - Epic poetry, Greek
Greek poet Homer established the standard for tales of epic quests and heroic journeys with the "Odyssey." Crowded with characters, both human and nonhuman, and bursting with action, the "Odyssey" details the adventures of Ulysses, king of Ithaca and hero of the Trojan War, as he struggles to return to his home and his waiting, ever-faithful wife, Penelope.
Along the way Ulysses encounters the seductive Circe, who changes men into swine; the gorgeous water-nymph Calypso, who keeps him a "prisoner of love" for seven years; the terrible, one-eyed, man-eating giant Cyclops; and a host of other ogres, wizards, sirens, and gods. But when he finally reaches Ithaca after ten years of travel, his trials have only begun. There he must battle the scheming noblemen who, thinking him dead, have demanded that Penelope choose one of them to be her new husband--and Ithaca's new king.
Often called the "second work of Western literature" (the "Iliad," also by Homer, being the first), the "Odyssey" is not only a rousing adventure drama but also a profound meditation on courage, loyalty, family, fate, and undying love. More than 3,000 years old, it was the first story to delineate carefully and exhaustively a single character arc--a narrative structure that serves as the foundation and heart of the modern novel.

About the author (2014)

Homer is a legendary ancient Greek poet, traditionally said to be the author of the epic poems the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey."
One of "AudioFile" magazine's Golden Voices, Simon Prebble has received over twenty Earphones Awards and five Listen-Up Awards, and he has been a finalist fourteen times for an Audie Award. In 2006, "Publishers Weekly" named him Narrator of the Year, and he was named "Booklist"'s 2010 Voice of Choice.

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