"Sing, goddess, the anger of Peleus' son Achilleus / and its
devastation." For sixty years, that's how Homer has begun the
"Iliad" in English, in Richmond Lattimore's faithful
translation--the gold standard for generations of students and
general readers.
This long-awaited new edition of Lattimore's "Iliad" is designed to
bring the book into the twenty-first century--while leaving the
"poem" as firmly rooted in ancient Greece as ever. Lattimore's
elegant, fluent verses--with their memorably phrased heroic
epithets and remarkable fidelity to the Greek--remain unchanged,
but classicist Richard Martin has added a wealth of supplementary
materials designed to aid new generations of readers. A new
introduction sets the poem in the wider context of Greek life,
warfare, society, and poetry, while line-by-line notes at the back
of the volume offer explanations of unfamiliar terms, information
about the Greek gods and heroes, and literary appreciation. A
glossary and maps round out the book.
The result is a volume that actively invites readers into Homer's
poem, helping them to understand fully the worlds in which he and
his heroes lived--and thus enabling them to marvel, as so many have
for centuries, at Hektor and Ajax, Paris and Helen, and the
devastating rage of Achilleus.
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