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The best collection of Greco-Roman myths, period.I also love the cover, Bernini's Apollo and Daphne is one of the greatest sculptures ever made, you can even see her fingers becoming branches and leaves.
Those early cultures had no shame. A lot of sexual stuff in it. Loved it. Especially Dionysus and the Zeus myths.
Despite the rich translation and enjoyable nature of the work, the fractured nature of the poem is also a negative aspect of the book, as it breaks up any sort of continuity, creating a lack of direction. To those with a careful eye, you can spot Ovid's influence from Chaucer to Shakespeare to Ted Hughes. The vivacity of many tales can be seen in European art, and even in musical representations, a la an early opera of Mozart's, a 2002 Broadway adaption, and a song cycle by Patricia Barber. This is a lovely compendium of myths, legends, and flattery by arguably the best writer of the ancient world, and is considered one of the three canonical Roman poets, including Virgil and Horace. It takes an effort to see the genius behind this spiraled purpose, but the effort is definitely worth while. If one is familiar at all with subsequent literary history, you can see the telling influence of Ovid's work across time and genre. The Metamorphoses of Ovid are a huge undertaking, to have written, read, and translate. If nothing else, Ovid collected a large array of Greek and Roman myth, tales that might have been lost without him.
Kindle edition will please both casual readers of the work and scholars looking to get a little more in-depth. This is one of the most important and influential works of Western civilization.
These tales of Ovid on change helped me understand better the constant role of change in my own personal transformation. This is genuinely a great work of literature and the pages really fly by rapidly. This is an important window into ancient times and the stories must have been intriguing to hear in engaging oratory.
His focus on transformation parables of ancient myths taught me quite a bit about change. The origins of common fables must have had their ancient roots in Ovid. I confess that reading Ovid's Metamorphoses has left me a changed man.
So much of art, especially painting, music and literature, owes its transformation from the tales articulated with wit and charm by Ovid. And, thus, the tales of Ovid transformed me in the reading and in the writing transformed Ovid into immortality. I was intrigued by how often unwanted change was unwillingly created by life-denying action that angers one of the gods.
All the great figures of ancient times are here: Daedalus, Achilles, Paris, Perseus, Hector, Pygmalion, Midas, Helen and Aeneas to name but a few.
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