Track | Section | Reader | Length |
01 | 01 - The Quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon | Joshua B. Christensen | 32:29 |
02 | 02 - Agammemnon's Dream | ML Cohen | 43:49 |
03 | 03 - Paris Challenges Menelaus | heyfd | 23:50 |
04 | 04 - A Quarrel in Olympus | hugh mac | 28:32 |
05 | 05 - The exploits of Diomed | Joshua B. Christensen | 46:09 |
06 | 06 - Hector and Andromache | Kirsten Ferrari | 26:35 |
07 | 07 - Hector and Ajax Fight | hugh mac | 24:01 |
08 | 08 - The Victory of the Trojans | Mark F. Smith | 33:44 |
09 | 09 - The Embassy to Achilles | Michael Hellein | 38:39 |
10 | 10 - Ulysses and Diomed go out as Spies | Anna Simon | 31:25 |
11 | 11 - Agamemnon's Day of Glory | Pete Darby | 52:40 |
12 | 12 - The Trojans Break the Wall | ML Cohen | 23:55 |
13 | 13 - Neptune helps the Achaeans | ML Cohen | 41:03 |
14 | 14 - Agamemnon Proposes that the Achaeans Should Sail Home | Kelly Dougherty | 34:22 |
15 | 15 - Apollo Heals Hector | Kevin LaVergne | 48:39 |
16 | 16 - Patroclus fights in the armor of Achilles | Brad Powers | 48:59 |
17 | 17 - The Light around the Body of Patroclus | ML Cohen | 35:25 |
18 | 18 - The Shield of Achilles | Anna Simon | 34:23 |
19 | 19 - Achilles Goes Out to Fight | Gesine | 26:04 |
20 | 20 - Achilles fights Aeneas | entr0p3te | 30:11 |
21 | 21 - Achilles Drives the Trojans Back | Leon Mire | 36:31 |
22 | 22 - The death of Hector | ML Cohen | 30:33 |
23 | 23 - The Funeral Games of Patroclus | M?ns Broo | 49:19 |
24 | 24 - Priam Ransoms Hector's Body | ontheroad | 43:56 |
Notes
Running time: 14 hours and 22 minutes
Read by: Multiple readers (see contents)
Book Coordinator: Kirsten Ferreri
Meta Coordinator: Kirsten Ferreri
Artwork
Cover: “Achilles Triumphant” fresco on the upper level of the main hall of the Achilleion at Corfu, Greece by Franz von Match.
DVD Inset: Bust of Homer from the British Museum
DVD Insert background image: Engraved frontispiece of a 1660 edition of Homer’s The Iliad translated into English by John Ogilby.
Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.
The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. We spend considerable time and effort to ensure the recordings are free of noise, equalized for maximum listener pleasure, and that tracks are leveled and normalized to provide a consistent listening experience.
The Iliad by Homer is an epic of poem over 15,000 lines that recounts the conflict between Agamemnon, the man of power, and Achilles, the genius of war, over a period of several weeks. Their contretemps is set within the larger tale of the ten year Trojan War, and is told in flashbacks and flash-forwards; by the end the poem has told a more or less complete story of the war. No television min-series has anything on this epic poem. The story is utterly human and has resonated down the centuries. There’s the ugly man of power, selfish, greedy, entitled and obsessed. There’s the young, beautiful star, burdened with greatness and by the false power of a man without merit. The authentic versus the phony - the same old story.
The Iliad was composed sometime between 760 and 710 B.C., and together with The Odyssey is considered the first great work of western literature. “Composed” is the correct word because The Iliad was passed down by oral tradition. The teacher recited it, the students repeated it and memorized it – all of it. There’s a story, apocryphal or not, that around 700 B.C., a virtual riot broke out when some upstart in the Academy proposed to write it all down, because the older, wiser men believed transcription would destroy the Greek facility for memorization, not to mention the silencing of the sound of the poetry itself. This reading returns this epic to the manner of presentation in force at the time. (Summary by Michael Hogan)
Play sample:
Download a PDF datasheet
Item Info | |
EAN - DVD case | 0684758935977 |
EAN - CD jacket | 0682550991160 |
Media | MP3 CD |
Package | DVD box |
Author | Homer (c. 8th century) |
Translator | Samuel Butler (1835 - 1902) |
Year | Between 760 and 710 B.C |
Recording | |
Read by | Multiple readers |
Length | 14 hours 22 minutes |
Type of Reading | Solo |
The Iliad of Homer
- Author: Homer
- Product Code: DB-1012
- Availability: In Stock
-
$11.99