Adams, Hebron E.
The Burodyssey of H.O.M.E.R. Reston, VA: Foxon Press,
1994. [A delightful spoof of the adventures of Odysseus as reflected
in bureaucratic memos. Recommended to anyone who enjoys Homer and
has worked for the government.]
Clarke, Lindsay. The War at Troy.
Thomas Dunne Books, Saint Martin's Press, N.Y., 2004. [A
modern prose retelling of the events of the Trojan War, this
earnest, carefully researched, but rather prosaic novel,
narrated by the Ithacan bard Phemius, begins with Aphrodite
and the Golden Apple of Discord and ends with the fall of
Troy and the division of the spoils (women) among the
victorious Greeks.]
Fleishman, Paul. Dateline:
Troy. Candlewick Press, 1996. [A retelling of the story of the
Trojan War for young people, that juxtaposes modern news clippings
about contemporary wars with the events of this ancient war.]
Giradoux, Jean.
The Tiger at the Gates (translated from La Guerre De Troie
N'Aura Pas Lieu). First American Edition, N.Y. Oxford University
Press, 1956. [Although the Greeks and Trojans (reflective of the
French and Germans) try to achieve peace, chance or fate intervenes,
and the war goes on.]
Hill, Reginald.
Arms and the Women. N.Y.: Paperback, Dell-Random House,
1999.[This is a nifty British mystery which is wrapped around a
fledgling novel being written by one of the characters. The novel in
a mystery is about Odysseus and Aeneas, who meet on their respective
wanderings after the fall of Troy. This Odysseus is a close kin to
Andy Dalziel, the fat and clever Detective Superintendent (with some
nods to Falstaff).]
Kazantzakis,
Nikos. The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel. Translation,
Introduction, etc. by Kimon Friar. N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, 1958.
[Stands alongside Joyce's Ulysses in the renovation of the
character of Odysseus.]
Logue, Christopher.
All Day Permanent Red: An Account of the First Battle Scenes
of Homer's Iliad. Farrar Straus & Giroux, April 2003.
[A rather amazing version of an extremely violent battle
scene in the Iliad, done in very modern terms. This
is not a translation, but a new vision based on Homer's
vision.]
Matturro, Richard. Troy.
Walker and Company, New York, 1989. [This novel relates
the siege at Troy, from the events of the Iliad
through the fall of Troy. The author has a degree in
classics, and he explains all the events in terms of how
things were "back then." The gods are gone from Homer's
tale, as is the wonder. This version might be interesting to
young readers who want to know more about Troy, but are not
ready to read the Iliad. Although out of print, there
is a Braille edition still available.]
Mee, Charles.
History Plays. A Collection of Six Plays, including Orestes and The
Trojan Women: a Love Story. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1998.[Mee writes exciting, contemporary versions of ancient
Greek plays. He also has his plays available online at:
http://www.charlesmee.org/html/plays.html ]
McCullough, Colleen. The
Song of Troy: A Story That Will Outlast History. London:
Orion Books, Ltd., 1998. Orion Paperback, 1999. [A heavy
attempt to retell the story of Troy as historically "real,"
rather in the tradition of Dictys and Dares--no gods, no
destiny, nobody larger than life. Odysseus and Deiphobos are
lovers, as are Achilles and Patroclus; Achilles is a very
nice man, Briseis a sweet woman who kills herself in
Achilles' tomb, the "quarrel" between Achilles and Agamemnon
is a strategy of Odysseus to draw the Trojans out of Troy,
etc.]
O'Neill, Eugene.
Mourning Becomes Electra. In Three Plays: Desire Under the
Elms, Strange Interlude, Mourning Becomes Electra. Vintage
Books, 1959.
[Mourning Becomes Electra is a trilogy (Homecoming, The
Hunted, and The Haunted) reinterpreting the Oresteia
of Aeschylus as a tragedy in New England.]
Prescott, Michael. Comes
the Dark. New York: Signet, 1999. [A popular retelling
of the story of Orestes, son of Clytemnestra, done as a
modern murder mystery.]
Sartre, Jean-Paul. The
Flies. In No Exit and 3 Other Plays: Dirty Hands, The Flies, The
Respectful Prostitute. The Flies translated from the French by
Stuart Gilbert. Vintage, 1955. [This play reinterprets the story of
Orestes as a modern existential dilemma.]
Shanower,
Eric. Age of Bronze: A Thousand Ships, Volume 1
(July, 2001). [A well-researched graphics and text series of
"comics," retelling the events of the Trojan war in great
detail, beginning with the Judgment of Paris. Volume
1, containing the first 9 issues, was published in July,
2001. See Web Site for Age
of Bronze for information about
the comics, the book, and how to get them.]
Simmons, Dan. Ilium.
Random House, 2003. [One of the most intriguing and complicated
modern retellings of the Troy Story, set on a future Earth and other
places. The Greek Gods are mysteriously cruel and powerful creatures
that dwell on Mons Olympus on Mars. There are well-intentioned
robots who obsess over Shakespeare and Proust, Hockenberry, a
resurrected classics professor from the 20th century, and a wealth
of other characters.]
-------. Olympos. Harper
Collins, 2005. [This is a sequel to Ilium. The Greek Gods
get their come-uppance, Hockenberry, the classics professor,
messes up the outcome of the Trojan War, Achilles falls in love
with the Amazon Penthesilea, one Odysseus (there are two of him)
goes off with Circe/Sycorax to explore new worlds and make love
in all of them, Prospero (perhaps the incarnation of
Shakespeare) and the well-intentioned robots fix up many
messes, and human life gets more or less back on track.
Personally, I found this volume more contrived, excessively
complicated, and less compelling than Ilium, but I am
sure that many readers will enjoy it.]
Stout, Rex. The Great
Legend. New York: Carroll and Graf, 1997. Originally published
quite a bit earlier in the twentieth century in All-Story
magazine (no date). [Idaeus, son of Dares, narrates this hardboiled
version of the Fall of Troy.]
Shay, Jonathan, M.D.
Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of
Character. [A commentary on the psychology of soldiers
in the Iliad that is part of the current issues
reading list for the Marine Corps’ Professional Reading
Program.]
Tuchman, Barbara W. The
March of Folly: from Troy to Vietnam. 1984. Ballentine edition,
1985. [Tuchman's aim is the folly of the Vietnam War, but she
develops her argument starting with a generous section on Troy and
the incredible folly of the Trojans bringing the Trojan Horse into
their city. Perhaps because of her purpose, Tuchman concludes that
the Trojans were free to decide to bring the horse in or not, which
goes against most versions of the story, but is a nice prelude to
her discussion of the history of bad political judgments,
culminating in Vietnam.]
Walcott, Derek. The
Odyssey: A Stage Version. New York: Noonday Press,
Farrar Straus Giroux, 1993. [This delightful play takes
Odysseus, his family and crew to the Caribbean.]
-------. Omeros. New York:
Noonday Press, Farrar Straus and Giroux, 1990. [The story of the
Odyssey retold as an epic poem set in the Caribbean.]
Waswo, Richard. The
Founding Legend of Western Civilization: From Virgil to
Vietnam. Wesleyan University Press, 1997.
[Virgil's take on the trek from Troy to the founding of Rome
is the core legend for Western expansion according to Waswo.] |
(c) Diane Thompson : 8/25/1998; updated:
04/10/2008
|