"A masterpiece . An Odyssey worthy of the original." --William Arrowsmith, The Nation "Here there is no anxious straining after mighty effects, but rather a constant readiness for what the occasion demands, a kind of Odyssean adequacy to the task in hand." --Seamus Heaney "To get the gist of it you could read Fagles or Rieu. For some idea of how he must have sounded to his audiences or to the classical Greeks, we have our own archaic Chapman. To get a taste of his originality, try James Joyce, or Derek Walcott. For drama and pathos try Christopher Logue, and for sheer poetic artistry try Fitzgerald or Alexander Pope." --James Davidson, London Review of Books " The Odyssey .
could be thought of as awaiting its translator: until Robert Fitzgerald came along . He has an ear for the cadence of speech, a sense of the prose reality of Homer's action." --D. S. Carne-Ross, The New York Review of Books "Graceful and inventive." --Guy Davenport, in Geography of the Imagination "Robert Fitzgerald's Odyssey is greatly told and in, exactly, our time; and the translator learned the meaning of certain words by using his eyes, on a boat in the Aegean, at dawn." --Hugh Kenner, in The Pound Era and inventive." --Guy Davenport, in Geography of the Imagination "Robert Fitzgerald's Odyssey is greatly told and in, exactly, our time; and the translator learned the meaning of certain words by using his eyes, on a boat in the Aegean, at dawn.
" --Hugh Kenner, in The Pound Era and inventive." --Guy Davenport, in Geography of the Imagination "Robert Fitzgerald's Odyssey is greatly told and in, exactly, our time; and the translator learned the meaning of certain words by using his eyes, on a boat in the Aegean, at dawn." --Hugh Kenner, in The Pound Era and inventive." --Guy Davenport, in Geography of the Imagination "Robert Fitzgerald's Odyssey is greatly told and in, exactly, our time; and the translator learned the meaning of certain words by using his eyes, on a boat in the Aegean, at dawn." --Hugh Kenner, in The Pound Era.