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Why Homer Matters - by Adam Nicolson (Paperback)

Why Homer Matters - by  Adam Nicolson (Paperback)
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Last Price: 17.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"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"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>Complex, personal, and profound ... a brash and brave piece of writing ... filled with the swords and spears that inflict the carnage of the <i>Iliad</i>. -<i>The Wall Street Journal <p/></i></b><i>Why Homer Matters</i> is a magical journey of discovery across wide stretches of the past, sewn together by the <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i> and their metaphors of life and trouble. Homer's poems-transmitted orally across the generations, shaped and reshaped in a living, self-renewing tradition-occupy, as Adam Nicolson writes a third space in the way we relate to the past: not as memory, which lasts no more than three generations, nor as the objective accounts of history, but as epic, invented after memory but before history, poetry which aims to bind the wounds that time inflicts. <p/>The Homeric poems are among the oldest stories we have, drawing on deep roots in the Eurasian steppes beyond the Black Sea, but emerging at a time around 2000 BC when the people who would become the Greeks came south and both clashed and fused with the more sophisticated inhabitants of the Eastern Mediterranean. <p/>The poems, which ask the eternal questions about the individual and the community, honor and service, love and war, tell us how we became who we are.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"Highly accessible ... Nicolson's amateurism (in the best, etymological, sense of the word: from the Latin <i>amare</i>, to love) and globe-trotting passion for his subject is contagious ... bringing the heroic age into our own." --<i>The New York Times Book Review</i> <p/>"Complex, personal, and profound ... a brash and brave piece of writing ... filled with the swords and spears that inflict the carnage of the <i>Iliad</i>." --<i>The Wall Street Journal</i> <p/>"Stirring ... Nicolson eloquently sums up what we still look for in Homer: 'wisdom, his fearless encounter with the dreadful, his love of love and hatred of death, the sheer scale of his embrace, his energy and brightness, his resistance to nostalgia.'" --<i>The Washington Post</i> <p/>"Adam Nicolson's books are like beautiful shells encountered in the sand: delicate, rare and wonderful. [<i>Why Homer Matters</i>] is a moving personal musing on Homer--on what he has to say to us today about life and about ourselves." --<i>Alexander McCall Smith, Daily Mail</i> <p/>"Erudite, far-ranging in time and space, and provocative ... This rich and adventurous book is Nicolson's own odyssey, a wide-eyed ramble around the ancient world and through the centuries ... Nicolson's enthusiasm [is] enriching and his examination of the character of the two epics acute and fascinating." --<i>Allan Massie, Literary Review</i> <p/>"Seldom have I been so moved, inspired, informed and delighted as by Adam Nicolson's elegant explanation of why Homer--so long forgotten in the school-time haze--is so vitally important as a lifetime <i>vade mecum</i>. The author must be one of the last true polymaths standing: his writings--this new book above all--give pleasure beyond compare." --<i>Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman and The Men Who United the States</i> <p/>"There is no better explicator of life, of art, and the process by which we experience both than Adam Nicolson. In <i>Why Homer Matters</i>, he is at his eloquent and rapturous best. Through the prism of this great poet, Nicolson has crafted a kind of metaphysical guidebook on how to lead a meaningful life in in a world of terrifying and wondrous change." --<i>Nathaniel Philbrick, author of In the Heart of the Sea and Bunker Hill</i> <p/>"In this passionate, deeply personal book, Nicolson explains why Homer matters--to him, to you, to the world--in a text full of twists, turns, and surprises." --<i>Publishers Weekly</i> <p/>"[A] gracefully written and deeply informed book...Nicolson's spirited exploration illuminates our own indelible past." --<i>Kirkus, starred review</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Adam Nicolson's</b> books include the <i>New York Times</i> bestseller <i>God's Secretaries</i>, <i>Sea Room</i>, <i>Sissinghurst</i>, and <i>Seamanship</i>. Among his honors are the Somerset Maugham Award, the W. H. Heinemann Prize, and the British Topography Prize; he lives on a farm in Sussex with his wife and their five grown children.

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Cheapest price in the interval: 17.99 on October 22, 2021

Most expensive price in the interval: 17.99 on December 20, 2021