Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Cover of Penguin Classics edition of The Iliad

Repetitive yet hypnotic, a grand tragedy

The Iliad by Homer

January 30, 2022 by Dinah Lord 2 Comments

“The wrath of Achilles is my theme, that fatal wrath which, in fulfilment of the will of Zeus, brought the Achaeans so much suffering and sent the gallant souls of many noblemen to Hades, leaving their bodies as carrion for the dogs and passing birds.” So begins E. V. Rieu’s translation (for Penguin Classics in 1950) of Homer’s Iliad, a prose translation of Greek hexameter verse, telling of the story of an incident, over only a few weeks, in the interminable ten-year Trojan war. We […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Poetry Tagged With: classics, Homer, literature in translation, The Iliad

Dinah Lord's CBR14 Review No:3 · Genres: Fiction, Poetry · Tags: classics, Homer, literature in translation, The Iliad ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Mixed Grill

Stony the Road by Henry Louis Gates Jr

Lathe of Heaven by Ursula Le Guin

Who will Pay Reparations on my Soul? by Jesse McCarthy

Middle Passage by Charles Johnson

How to Hide an Empire by Daniel Immerwahr

We Had a Little Real Estate Problem by Kliph Nesteroff

Dreamland by Sam Quinones

The Mismeasure of Man by Stephen Jay Gould

Necronomicon by HP Lovecraft

Black Flags, Blue Waters by Eric Jay Dolin

The Iliad by Homer

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain

Whores for Gloria by William T Vollmann

The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty

Celebration by Harry Crews

A Feast of Snakes by Harry Crews

Gravel Heart by Abdulrazak Gurnah

October 18, 2021 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

Stony the Road – 5/5 Stars Yet another book that presented answers to questions in part, but mostly added to my reading list, this slight book by Henry Louis Gates Jr. was written to support a documentary and to provide additional resources, analysis, and insight into the post-Civil War Reconstruction and Jim Crow periods in the US. For a more robust understanding of the Reconstruction era, Gates points us to WEB Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction in America, which was one of the first extensive histories […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Abdulrazak Gurnah, Charles Johnson, Daniel Immerwahr, Eric Jay Dolin, Harry Crews, Henry Louis Gates Jr, Homer, HP Lovecraft, Jesse McCarthy, Kliph Nesteroff, Mark Twain, Sam Quinones, Stephen Jay Gould, Ursula Le Guin, William Peter Blatty, William T Vollmann

vel veeter's CBR13 Review No:425 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: Abdulrazak Gurnah, Charles Johnson, Daniel Immerwahr, Eric Jay Dolin, Harry Crews, Henry Louis Gates Jr, Homer, HP Lovecraft, Jesse McCarthy, Kliph Nesteroff, Mark Twain, Sam Quinones, Stephen Jay Gould, Ursula Le Guin, William Peter Blatty, William T Vollmann ·
· 0 Comments

I came for the fighting, but stayed for the sweet, sweet love

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

April 8, 2019 by ingres77 3 Comments

I’m closer to 40 than I am 30, and I’ve never read The Iliad. I did, however, read The Odyssey in middle school, and quite liked it – though poetry has never been my thing, and the archaic formatting of the translation I read bothered me. Still. It was a good story, and I was in the florescence of my love for heroic fantasy, so The Odyssey kind of felt like the genesis for the types of stories I was reading at the time. So […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, History Tagged With: classical Greece, greek mythology, Homer, madeline miller, The Iliad, the song of achilles

ingres77's CBR11 Review No:6 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, History · Tags: classical Greece, greek mythology, Homer, madeline miller, The Iliad, the song of achilles ·
Rating:
· 3 Comments

New translation of a 2,000 plus year old classic. #CBRBingo

September 5, 2018 by narfna 8 Comments

I first read The Odyssey when I was a freshman in high school. I think it might actually have been the very first assigned reading that year, and I remember being excited for it, and liking the story, but having suuuuuch a hard time getting through it, because the translation I was reading was so dense. Looking back (and now having read this translation) I don’t actually think I liked it as much as I thought I did, and I have some definite opinions about […]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: cbr10bingo, classics, Emily Wilson, Homer, mythology, narfna, oral tradition, poetry, scholarship, The Odyssey, translated, verse

narfna's CBR10 Review No:106 · Genres: Poetry · Tags: cbr10bingo, classics, Emily Wilson, Homer, mythology, narfna, oral tradition, poetry, scholarship, The Odyssey, translated, verse ·
Rating:
· 8 Comments

Epic translation of The Odyssey

January 10, 2018 by ElCicco 9 Comments

It has been many a year since I’ve read any of the Greek classics. I remember reading some plays back in high school (early 1980s), but I’m not sure I ever read the entirety of Homer’s Odyssey, and if I did, I most likely didn’t find much enjoyment in it. A classic of western literature and a staple of both literature and western civilization courses, The Odyssey tells the epic tale of a heroic Greek warrior’s 20-year quest to get home after the Trojan War. […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Poetry Tagged With: #CBR10, ElCicco, Emily Wilson, epic poetry, Homer, The Odyssey

ElCicco's CBR10 Review No:3 · Genres: Fantasy, Poetry · Tags: #CBR10, ElCicco, Emily Wilson, epic poetry, Homer, The Odyssey ·
Rating:
· 9 Comments


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