Why Homer Matters: A History
Material type: TextPublisher: New York : Henry Holt and Company, 2014Description: xiii, 301p.: illustrations, maps ; 24 cmISBN:- 9781627791793
- Homer -- Criticism and interpretation
- Nicolson, Adam, 1957- -- Travel -- Europe
- Homer -- Influence
- Homer -- Settings
- Homer -- Appreciation
- Epic poetry, Greek -- History and criticism
- Landscapes -- Europe
- HISTORY / Ancient / Greece
- LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical
- Europe -- Description and travel
- PA4037.N523
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Asian University for Women Library | Fiction | Fiction | PA4037.N523 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 01 | Available | 029573 |
Browsing Asian University for Women Library shelves, Shelving location: Fiction, Collection: Fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
ML410.N33N38 The Return of Laili : Selected Songs of Kazi Nazrul Islam | MLCS 86/10070 Arjun | P53.285 The Internet and the Language Classroom: A Practical Guide for Teachers | PA4037.N523 Why Homer Matters: A History | PA4494.A7B74 Xenophon's Anabasis: A Socratic History | PA4494.A7B74 Xenophon's Anabasis, or, The Expedition of Cyrus | PA4495. A5313 The Landmark Xenophon's Anabasis |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"In this passionate, deeply personal book, Adam Nicolson explains why Homer matters--to him, to you, to the world--in a text full of twists, turns and surprises. In a spectacular journey through mythical and modern landscapes, Adam Nicholson explores the places forever haunted by their Homeric heroes. From Sicily, awash with wildflowers shadowed by Italy's largest oil refinery, to Ithaca, southern Spain, and the mountains on the edges of Andalusia and Extremadura, to the deserted, irradiated steppes of Chernobyl, where Homeric warriors still lie under the tumuli, unexcavated. This is a world of springs and drought, seas and cities, with not a tourist in sight. And all sewn together by the poems themselves and their great metaphors of life and suffering. Showing us the real roots of Homeric consciousness, the physical environment that fills the gaps between the words of the poems themselves, Nicholson's is itself a Homeric journey. A wandering meditation on lost worlds, our interconnectedness with our ancestors, and the surroundings we share. This is the original meeting of place and mind, our empathy with the past, our landscape as our drama. Following the acclaimed Gentry, which established him as one of the great landscape writers working today, Nicholson takes Homer's poems back to their source: beneath the distant, god-inhabited mountains, on the Trojan plains above the graves of the heroic dead, we find afresh the foundation level of human experience on Earth"-- Provided by publisher.
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