The stories of the Trojan war and Helen of Troy, Patroclus and
Achilles, the Sirens and the Cyclops are embedded in western
culture, yet readers often fail to recognise that they were made
famous by two epic poems, The Iliad and The Odyssey,
and one blind poet: Homer.
Alberto Manguel begins his book with the poems' inception in
ancient Greece and demonstrates how these poems have reverberated
subsequently through the western canon, from the Rome of Virgil and
Horace to Joyce's Dublin and Derek Walcott's Caribbean, via Dante
and Racine. In this lyrical and graceful short volume, Manguel
delights in the original poems and celebrates their presence
throughout history.
Alberto Manguel is a world-renowned writer, translator and
editor of literary anthologies. His works include A History of
Reading, published in 1997 and his novel, Stevenson
Under the Palm Trees, published in 2005.