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La Odisea

La Odisea

Homer

3.83
1,198,693 valoraciones·26,239 reseñas

Canta, oh Musa, sobre aquel hombre de múltiples senderos, que tras saquear Troya vagó errante durante años. Así comienza la magistral traducción de Robert Fagles de La Odisea. Si la Ilíada es la mayor epopeya bélica, La Odisea narra el viaje vital del hombre común. La astucia de Odiseo para sobreviv...

páginas
541
Format
Paperback
Publicado
2006-10-31
Editorial
Penguin Classics
ISBN
9780143039952

Sobre el autor

Homer
Homer

764 libros · 0 seguidores

Homer (Greek:Όμηροςborn c. 8th century BC) was a Greek poet who is credited as the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey, two epic poems that are foundational works of ancient Greek literature. Homer is considered one of the most revered and influential authors in history.Homer's Iliad centers on a quarrel between King A...

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26,239 reseñas
3.8
1,198,693 valoraciones
5
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4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Bella
Bella·9 months ago
long distance couple goals
emma
emma·4 years ago
welcome to THE OCTOBERDYSSEY, this month's installment of my project long classics dedicated to getting me to read long and intimidating old books.this one is a little different, since it's technically a revisit.i read this in school but i don't remember anything about it except the words "wine-dark sea" and that i hated it.that's a good enough reason to reread.BOOK Iodysseus is being "kept" by a "goddess" and meanwhile his wife penelope is stuck home with their adult son doing all she can to fe...
Leonard Gaya
Leonard Gaya·6 years ago
I first read Homer in the 19th-century French translation by Leconte de Lisle — the equivalent, say, of the 18th-century translation into English by Alexander Pope: a pompous, archaic and exhausting bore of a book. I kept my chin up and, after a while, tried another inflated Frenchman: the 1955 translation by the curly-moustached Victor Bérard (in the prestigious Pléiade edition, with an odd arrangement of chapters). A bit less depraved than the Parnassian poet, but all in all (alack!) not much ...
Kevin Ansbro
Kevin Ansbro·8 years ago
"I'm not normally a praying man, but if you're up there, please save me, Superman!" —Homer (Simpson)Following James Joyce's lead, I used Homer's heroic story as inspiration for a novel-in-progress.But how can I, a mere mortal, do justice to the most famous epic poem ever written? An encounter with a work of this magnitude should be shared rather than reviewed.Homer is the great, great, great (recurring) grand-daddy of modern literature, and this colossus is as immortal as the gods who recline...
Charlotte May
Charlotte May·9 years ago
Quite possibly one of my favourite books!
It was this novel that ignited my love for Greek and Roman mythology and antiquity - leading me to choose a degree in Classical Civilisations.
I always look back on The Odyssey with fondness - I love all the monsters he faces and the gods who involve themselves with Odysseus' trials as he makes his way home after the Trojan War.
LOVE LOVE LOVE.
Vit Babenco
Vit Babenco·10 years ago
“It is generally understood that a modern-day book may honorably be based upon an older one, especially since, as Dr. Johnson observed, no man likes owing anything to his contemporaries. The repeated but irrelevant points of congruence between Joyce's Ulysses and Homer's Odyssey continue to attract (though I shall never understand why) the dazzled admiration of critics.” The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim by Jorge Luis Borges.“The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done ...
s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all]
s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all]·14 years ago
Apropos of the upcoming film adaptation discourse, Have you considered who you would cast as Odysseus? But have you also considered that getting on a boat is a bad idea? Let’s explore! With literature. It’s like a lame Reading Rainbow episode about to happen, here we go:When you stop and think about it, much of classic literature is about how getting on a boat is a bad idea. This book is a litany on why boating is a bad idea. You can say it at least worked out for Odysseus but did it? Did it rea...
Kalliope
Kalliope·15 years ago
I have read The Odyssey three times. The first was not really a read but more of a listen in the true oral tradition. During embroidery class one of us, young girls on the verge of entering the teens, would read a passage while the rest were all busy with our eyes and fingers, our needles and threads. All learning to be future Penelopes: crafty with their crafts, cultivated, patient and loyal. And all wives.The second read was already as an adult. That time I let myself be led by the adventures ...
Sasha
Sasha·16 years ago
"Okay, so here's what happened. I went out after work with the guys, we went to a perfectly nice bar, this chick was hitting on me but I totally brushed her off. Anyway we ended up getting pretty wrecked, and we might have smoked something in the bathroom, I'm not totally clear on that part, and then this gigantic one-eyed bouncer kicked us out so we somehow ended up at a strip club. The guys were total pigs but not me, seriously, that's not glitter on my neck. And then we totally drove right by...
Stephen
Stephen·17 years ago
So my first “non-school related" experience with Homer’s classic tale, and my most powerful impression, beyond the overall splendor of the story, was...HOLY SHIT SNACKS these Greeks were a violent bunch. Case in point: ...they hauled him out through the doorway into the court, lopped his nose and ears with a ruthless knife, tore his genitals out for the dogs to eat rawand in manic fury hacked off hands and feet. then once they’d washed their own hands and feet they went inside again to join o...