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War Music

An Account of Homer's Iliad

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A remarkable hybrid of translation, adaptation, and invention

Picture the east Aegean sea by night,

And on a beach aslant its shimmering
Upwards of 50,000 men
Asleep like spoons beside their lethal Fleet.
"Your life at every instant up for— / Gone. / And, candidly, who gives a toss? / Your heart beats strong. Your spirit grips," writes Christopher Logue in his original version of Homer's Iliad, the uncanny "translation of translations" that won ecstatic and unparalleled acclaim as "the best translation of Homer since Pope's" (The New York Review of Books).
Logue's account of Homer's Iliad is a radical reimagining and reconfiguration of Homer's tale of warfare, human folly, and the power of the gods in language and verse that is emphatically modern and "possessed of a very terrible beauty" (Slate). Illness prevented him from bringing his version of the Iliad to completion, but enough survives in notebooks and letters to assemble a compilation that includes the previously published volumes War Music, Kings, The Husbands, All Day Permanent Red, and Cold Calls, along with previously unpublished material, in one final illuminating volume arranged by his friend and fellow poet Christopher Reid. The result, War Music, comes as near as possible to representing the poet's complete vision and confirms what his admirers have long known: that "Logue's Homer is likely to endure as one of the great long poems of the twentieth century" (The Times Literary Supplement).

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    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2016

      Poet, actor, and playwright Logue's passing in 2011, age 85, prevented the completion of Big Men Falling a Long Way, the sixth part of his poetic reimagining of Homer's Iliad. Poet Reid (A Scattering) has edited the extent notes and manuscripts, arranging them with the published installments War Music (1981), Kings (1991), The Husbands (1995), All Permanent Red (2003), and Cold Calls (2005) to produce this collective volume. Logue's irreverent, idiosyncratic, and distinctive take on the Iliad, much in the form and spirit of Ezra Pound's "make it new" approach, is neither translation nor imitation. The free verse plays on the narrative gaps in Homer to deliver a dynamic and provocative parallel epic, capturing the temptations and the horror of war, relating as much the anxiety of Achilles as the warrior's rage. Like Alice Oswald's elegiac Memorial, Logue illuminates the complex human dimensions implicit in Homer's verse. VERDICT While necessarily incomplete, this work is highly recommended for the insight it brings to the Iliad and also as a powerful and original work in its own right.--Thomas L. Cooksey, formerly with Armstrong Atlantic State Univ., Savannah

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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