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Odysseus

By Beye, Charles Rowan
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Saturday, November 15 2003
Synthesizing material from the Iliad, the Odyssey, and other ancient sources, a "biography" of the legendary Greek hero that doubles as a vivid history of Bronze Age customs and beliefs.

Situating Odysseus' life in the second millennium b.c.e., the author reminds us

that this "king" was more like a local chieftain than the monarch of a post-medieval nation-state, and he ruled a rocky island 17 miles long, 4 miles wide. In Ithaca, as in the rest of the ancient world, even the elite lived simply, close to the land. Political relationships were intensely personal, oiled by lavish exchanges of gifts and ironclad rules of hospitality whose violation played a crucial role in the Trojan war and in many acts of Odysseus that seem horrifyingly brutal to modern readers. (The slaughter of Penelope's suitors, for example.) Beye (Classics Emeritus/CUNY; Ancient Epic Poetry, 1993, etc.) accepts the traditional portrait of his hero as cunning, cold, ruthless, essentially a loner in a society dominated by male friendships—"the protean man," in other words: "hated by many, respected by most, doubted, suspected, not exactly liked except by women. But then being liked was not one of the concerns of a prince in the Greek Bronze Age." The author's lucid chronological narrative of Odysseus' career is written in witty, deliberately colloquial prose. Only when describing his subject's sex life does Beye lapse into jarring anachronisms ("Circe was, he dimly realized, the woman of his masturbatory fantasies and his wet dreams finally come true"); in general, his breezy approach helps readers to grasp the nature of long-ago experiences while realizing how very differently these people thought and behaved. Early chapters covering less well-known events in Odysseus' youth are particularly fascinating, but Beye's accounts of the Trojan War, the hero's ten years of wandering, and his return to Ithaca also benefit from the author's formidable, yet lightly worn, erudition.

Lively, informative, and great fun: the perfect introduction to Odysseus and the society that shaped his exploits.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • McLaren, Clemence. Waiting for Odysseus.
  • McLAREN, Clemence. Waiting for Odysseus. Simon & Schuster, Pulse. 176p. c2000. 0-689-86705-0. $5.99. JS Four silent women from the original epic are finally given a ......
  • The Iliad.
  • HOMER. The Iliad. Read by Derek Jacobi & Maria Tucci. Abridged. 8 cds. 9 hrs. Penguin Audio. 2006. 0-14-305928-9. $36.95. Cardboard; content, author, reader notes....
  • THE ART OF MENTORING
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  • Agamemnon
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  • They Drew Fire: A PBS Documentary This Month
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  • The Penelopeia
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  • Olympos
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  • Thre-mail
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  • The Trojan Women
  • It may be funny when Apollo accuses Athena of being a "flip-flopper," but these modern references are also jarring and occasionally vulgar.
  • The Pig Scrolls
  • Gryllus, formerly a cook during the Trojan War, is now a pig—a talking pig. He was among Odysseus's band of wayward home-seekers who ended up ......
  • A mentor state of mind
  • G ood old-fashioned mentoring is back in vogue again and is fast becoming the hot initiative for foodservice operators. It should be for foodservice distributors, ......
  • Heroes and Eros
  • When it comes to tragedy, it's all Greek to Media Person.
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  • HEADNOTE WORKTRENDS HEADNOTE If you don't have a mentor, it's time to seek a relationship with someone who can stretch your thinking, challenge your old ......