I have decided to start my own personal little library, in which I will keep all of the books that I deem worth reading. I have started with the ancient epics, as I have taken an interest in that sort of literature now that I am in a Mythology class and am reading Homer's Odyssey.
I went to Walden's books and bought a hardcover copy of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, translated by S.H. Butcher and Andrew Lang.
I was shocked that they did not have Beowulf. I live in a rural area and I do not go to the city very often so I did not really know what to expect, but I thought that surely they must have Beowulf. After all, besides the Odyssey, it is one of the best-known classics.
So I went to the clerk and had her order it, along with Gilgamesh: A Verse Translation. Sadly they did not have it in hardcover.
I wanted a translation of Beowulf by Burton Raffel, but they didn't have it in hardcover. So I got one in hardcover translated by this Heaney fellow instead.
Now, the version of the Odyssey that we were reading in Mythology is a very condensed version, so of course having this prose translation by S.H. Butcher and Andrew Lang is very nice, what with the added detail and such. But I did find the background section of the book to be useful as it names several other epics that I would like to take a look at.
I want to know if any of you are familiar with these epics:
Nibelungenlied
The Saga of the Volsungs
El Cid
Kalevala
Mahabharata
The Song of Roland
I think that Nibelungenlied and El Cid might be interesting, but I am really not sure.
Preferably, I would like to obtain a hardcover copy of all of these books, but that might prove to be expensive, not to mention difficult. I did a search on the Internet and could not find anything other than a paperback copy for most of them.
I think that I will read them in this order:
El Cid
Nibelungenlied
The Saga of the Volsungs
Kalevala
The Song of Roland
Mahabharata
Would you say that this is reasonable? Which of these epics do you like best? And where can I find reasonably priced hardcover editions of them?
I went to Walden's books and bought a hardcover copy of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, translated by S.H. Butcher and Andrew Lang.
I was shocked that they did not have Beowulf. I live in a rural area and I do not go to the city very often so I did not really know what to expect, but I thought that surely they must have Beowulf. After all, besides the Odyssey, it is one of the best-known classics.
So I went to the clerk and had her order it, along with Gilgamesh: A Verse Translation. Sadly they did not have it in hardcover.
I wanted a translation of Beowulf by Burton Raffel, but they didn't have it in hardcover. So I got one in hardcover translated by this Heaney fellow instead.
Now, the version of the Odyssey that we were reading in Mythology is a very condensed version, so of course having this prose translation by S.H. Butcher and Andrew Lang is very nice, what with the added detail and such. But I did find the background section of the book to be useful as it names several other epics that I would like to take a look at.
I want to know if any of you are familiar with these epics:
Nibelungenlied
The Saga of the Volsungs
El Cid
Kalevala
Mahabharata
The Song of Roland
I think that Nibelungenlied and El Cid might be interesting, but I am really not sure.
Preferably, I would like to obtain a hardcover copy of all of these books, but that might prove to be expensive, not to mention difficult. I did a search on the Internet and could not find anything other than a paperback copy for most of them.
I think that I will read them in this order:
El Cid
Nibelungenlied
The Saga of the Volsungs
Kalevala
The Song of Roland
Mahabharata
Would you say that this is reasonable? Which of these epics do you like best? And where can I find reasonably priced hardcover editions of them?