Iliad of Homer (Lombardo translation) by Homer, Stanley Lombardo, Stanley Lombardo (Translator), Sheila Murnaghan (Introduction)

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Textbook (Paperback - New Edition)

  • 516pp
  • Sales Rank: 19,983

Textbook Information

  • ISBN-13: 9780872203525
  • Edition Description: New Edition
  • Edition Number: 1
  • Pub. Date: March 1997
  • Publisher: Hackett Publishing Co.
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: March 1997
  • Publisher: Hackett Publishing Co.
  • Format: Textbook Paperback, 516pp
  • Sales Rank: 19,983

Synopsis

Homer's Iliad has captivated readers and influenced writers and artists for more than two thousand years. Reading the poem in its original language provides an experience as challenging as it is rewarding. Most students encountering Homeric Greek for the first time need considerable help, especially with vocabulary and constructions that differ from the more familiar Attic forms. For anyone who has completed studies in elementary Greek, this edition provides the assistance necessary to read, understand, and appreciate the first book of the Iliad in its original language.

Structured to maximize reading ease, P. A. Draper's volume stands out among introductions to the Greek Iliad. Readers of this edition will appreciate the positioning of all notes facing the Greek text; the frequent vocabulary entries; the complete glossary; the appendix on basic Homeric forms and grammar; and the copious annotations on vocabulary, grammar, meter, historical and mythological allusions, and literary interpretation.

Primarily designed as a textbook, this volume will be an effective classroom tool and a useful acquisition for any library supporting a classics program. The book will find readers among high school and college Greek students, advanced students in Homer or epic poetry classes, graduate students working on reading-list requirements, and anyone interested in maintaining Greek reading skills.

P. A. Draper is Humanities Librarian, Cooper Library, Clemson University.

Annotation

Retells the events of the war between Greece and the city of Troy, focusing on Achilles' quarrel with Agamemnon.

James Davidson

Stanley Lombardo's new Iliad has a photograph of a D-Day landing on the cover and makes a reckless dash for the idiomatic. It is generally a fine and enjoyable version, but its colloquialism sometimes lapses jarringly, occasionally amusingly, into cliche.
Copyright 1983 The H.W. Wilson Company. All rights reserved. - The London Review of Books

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Biography

Ancient Greek poet Homer established the gold standard for heroic quests and sweeping journeys with his pair of classic epic poems, The Iliad and The Odyssey.

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Customer Reviews

Iliad of Homer (Lombardo translation)by Anonymous

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April 15, 2007: This is epic tale of both love and duty on the war socked plains of Troy. The rivelry inbetween Agomnon and Achillies within the story shows the true meening of humon nature with the gods and goddess of ancient Greece.

Iliad of Homer (Lombardo translation)by Anonymous

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April 28, 2001: I have read this book several times, so when I felt the call again I just happened to pick up this translation. I was happily surprised. I would gladly read anything else that he has translated. I like the earthy language, his use of the word 'b' when the goddeses are angry with each other. It fits. The introduction does not give too much away so that as the reader reads, the story unfolds anew. There is a list of the major characters at the end of the book so that if one gets mixed up with the names you just flip to the list and regain your bearing. This makes it user friendly. The story gives the reader a little insight into ancient Greek warfare and more, the struggles for power, the deference paid to heros and the sadness and its expression when facing death. It may have been written by a dead, bald, white man but in many ways it strikes me as anti-war, if the power of the females goddesess indicates anything it is their own power and authority as females. It speaks to modern times is what I am trying to say. Thank you.


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