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Cover of An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic

An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic

by Daniel Mendelsohn

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So this is the other book of the six that was, I’d say, the most beautifully written. Daniel Mendelsohn is a teacher of classics at Bard College on the East coast of the US and is a great fan of Homer’s Odyssey . He’s teaching a class on the Odyssey and his 82-year-old father decides to join the class with all these 18- and 19-year-olds. It becomes an exploration of his relationship with his father. It becomes an exploration of Homer’s Odyssey, which you get to know a lot about. It becomes an exploration of how Homer’s Odyssey , being a great human narrative, like all great human narratives applies to our lives today as much as it ever did. Therefore it’s a reaffirmation of the importance of not just the storytelling, but of classics as well. Get the weekly Five Books newsletter So it’s all those things, and it’s rather beautiful. At the end, his father dies. Probably his father was slightly crusty and didn’t always express his emotions—as is often the case between fathers and sons. But in the final years of his life he got to know his father really well. He did something really important before his father died. Not really, because most of it takes place in New York in the class. But towards the end of the book he does go on one of these Hellenic tours—I can’t remember off hand but I think Daniel Mendelsohn may even be lecturing on the cruise—and that is part of the book and part of the bonding between him and his father. That’s towards the end. So the Odyssey can literally refer to the cruise they take together, but it refers more to the exploration of his relationship with his father.

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"So this is the other book of the six that was, I’d say, the most beautifully written. Daniel Mendelsohn is a teacher of classics at Bard College on the East coast of the US and is a great fan of Homer’s Odyssey . He’s teaching a class on the Odyssey and his 82-year-old father decides to join the class with all these 18- and 19-year-olds. It becomes an exploration of his relationship with his father. It becomes an exploration of Homer’s Odyssey, which you get to know a lot about. It becomes an exploration of how Homer’s Odyssey , being a great human narrative, like all great human narratives applies to our lives today as much as it ever did. Therefore it’s a reaffirmation of the importance of not just the storytelling, but of classics as well. Get the weekly Five Books newsletter So it’s all those things, and it’s rather beautiful. At the end, his father dies. Probably his father was slightly crusty and didn’t always express his emotions—as is often the case between fathers and sons. But in the final years of his life he got to know his father really well. He did something really important before his father died. Not really, because most of it takes place in New York in the class. But towards the end of the book he does go on one of these Hellenic tours—I can’t remember off hand but I think Daniel Mendelsohn may even be lecturing on the cruise—and that is part of the book and part of the bonding between him and his father. That’s towards the end. So the Odyssey can literally refer to the cruise they take together, but it refers more to the exploration of his relationship with his father."
Best Nonfiction Books of 2017 · fivebooks.com
"Along with his work as a contributor and critic at The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books, Daniel Mendelsohn teaches classics at Bard College. He was preparing to teach his seminar on The Odyssey when he got a call from his 81-year-old father, Jay, who wanted to join the class. Mendelsohn let him in, but soon regretted it: He proved to be a disruptive influence, often challenging the professor, his own son. After the class ended, father and son went on a Mediterranean cruise that toured sites from The Odyssey, and Mendelsohn saw a new side of his dad: a charming storyteller who delighted the ship’s other passengers. In this memoir, Mendelsohn beautifully weaves the story of his relationship with his father with a scholarly but accessible reading of Homer’s epic."
NPR Books We Love — 2017 · apps.npr.org
"a wonderful book that is partly about fathers and sons, given by my father"
By the Book: Alex Prudhomme · nytimes.com