Homer's Daughter

Author(s): Robert Graves

Fiction

In Homer's Daughter Robert Graves recreates the Odyssey. This bold retelling of the ancient epic imagines that its author was not the blind and bearded Homer of legend, but a young woman in Western Sicily who calls herself NausicaƤ. In Robert Graves's words, Homer's Daughter is 'the story of a high-spirited and religious-minded Sicilian girl who saves her father's throne from usurpation, herself from a distasteful marriage, and her two younger brothers from butchery by boldly making things happen, instead of sitting still and hoping for the best.

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Product Information

A great imagination and above all a powerful intellect - Daily Telegraph

Robert Graves was a poet, professor, and the author of Goodbye to All That (1929), a landmark anti-heroic memoir of life in the trenches during World War I. He is even better known for his historical novels about the Roman emperor Claudius: I, Claudius (1934) and Claudius the God (1935). Despite those successes, Graves was primarily a poet: he published dozens of volumes of his verse during his life, and was professor of poetry at Oxford from 1961-66. Graves lived most of his adult life on the island of Majorca, at first with fellow poet Laura Riding, and later with his second wife Beryl Hodge.

General Fields

  • : 9780141197661
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : Penguin Classics
  • : 0.145
  • : 01 January 2012
  • : 198mm X 129mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 April 2012
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Robert Graves
  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • : 823.912
  • : 176