Mythos: The Greek Myths Retold

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Description

Penguin presents the unabridged audio CD edition of Mythos written and read by Stephen Fry.THE TIMES AUDIOBOOK OF THE WEEK’Perfect for the 21st Century. Ebullient, funny, Fry retells the Greek myths with elegance’ The Times’A cracking good story’ The Times Literary Supplement ‘A wondrous new immersion in ancient stories we only thought we knew. Page to page, Mythos is brilliant, funny, erudite, inventive, surprising and enthralling’ Richard North Patterson’Fry’s lively writing certainly conveys his lifelong passion for Greek myths . . . It’s a rollicking good read’ The Independent_________No one loves and quarrels, desires and deceives as boldly and brilliantly as Greek gods and goddesses. They are like us, only more so – their actions and adventures scrawled across the heavens above. From the birth of the universe to the creation of humankind, Stephen Fry – who fell in love with these stories as a child – retells these myths for our tragic, comic, fateful age. Witness Athena born from the cracking open of Zeus’s great head and follow Persephone down into the dark realm of Hades. Experience the terrible and endless fate of Prometheus after his betrayal of Zeus and shiver as Pandora opens her jar of evil torments.The Greek gods are the best and worst of us, and in Stephen Fry’s hands they tell us who we are. Mythos – smart, funny, and above all great fun – is the retelling we deserve by a man who has been entertaining the nation for over four decades.’A cracking good story’ The Times Literary Supplement

Additional information

Weight 0.318 kg
Dimensions 3.4 × 13.7 × 14.1 cm
by

Format

CD-Audio

Language

publisher

Year Published

2017-11-2

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1405934328

Review Quote

The Greek myths are told to you here by the ever-soothing voice of Stephen Fry, who takes you from Zeus to Athena with his typical humour. The Greek gods of the past become relatable as pop culture, modern literature and music are woven throughout. It is joyfully informal yet full of the literary legacy threaded through so much of the tapestry of contemporary Greece

Other text

Wit and erudition are impressively evident . . . Read by Fry with his accustomed ebullient showmanship [he] gives the legends modern resonance by telling them with a contemporary colloquial twist'

Series