
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 20 reviews on

"Subtle, profoundly moving . . . an intricately constructed, multidimensional journey of a father and son and their travails through life and love. Mendelsohn weaves his basket with many wands; the complexity seems natural, an account of the quality of life itself, a route to revelation. Mendelsohn explicates the Odyssey with exemplary and generous clarity. A book of shimmering, beautiful, dapple-skilled intelligence." --Adam Nicolson, The New York Times Book Review
"Rich, vivid, a blood-warm book . . . a deeply moving tale of a father and son's transformative journey in reading--and reliving--the Odyssey. Mendelsohn wears his learning lightly yet superbly. What catches you off guard about this memoir is how moving it is: it has many things to say not only about Homer's epic poem, but about fathers and sons. Mendelsohn has written a book that's accessible to nearly any curious reader. The book partakes of at least four genres: classroom drama; travel writing; biographical memoir; literary criticism. Revealing and funny . . . Mendelsohn makes Homer's epic shine in your mind." --Dwight Garner, The New York Times
"My favorite classicist once again combines meticulous literary investigation with warm and wrenching human emotion--books like these are why I love reading." --Lee Child