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Der krönende Abschluss der Die berühmteste Heldengeschichte aller Zeiten

Troja ist gefallen. Nach zehn Jahren Krieg lockt für die Griechen endlich die Heimat. Während Agamemnon zu Hause die Rache Klytaimnestras erwartet, ist Odysseus dazu verdammt, über die Meere zu irren. Dabei muss er sich einäugigen Riesen, verführerischen Nymphen, schrecklichen Seeungeheuern und tosenden Stürmen stellen, um nach Ithaka zu seiner klugen Frau Penelope zurückzukehren.

In einer grandios unterhaltsamen Neuerzählung des Homer’schen Epos lädt uns der Erfolgsautor Stephen Fry dazu ein, die faszinierende Welt der griechischen Mythen, Götter und Helden neu zu entdecken. Fast wünscht man sich dabei, diese Irrfahrt würde nie enden.

410 pages, Paperback

First published September 26, 2024

2556 people are currently reading
34651 people want to read

About the author

Stephen Fry

304 books11.8k followers
Stephen John Fry is an English comedian, writer, actor, humourist, novelist, poet, columnist, filmmaker, television personality and technophile. As one half of the Fry and Laurie double act with his comedy partner, Hugh Laurie, he has appeared in A Bit of Fry and Laurie and Jeeves and Wooster. He is also famous for his roles in Blackadder and Wilde, and as the host of QI. In addition to writing for stage, screen, television and radio he has contributed columns and articles for numerous newspapers and magazines, and has also written four successful novels and a series of memoirs.

See also Mrs. Stephen Fry as a pseudonym of the author.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,549 reviews
Profile Image for William Gwynne.
489 reviews3,410 followers
January 9, 2025
I have throughly enjoyed Stephen Fry's Greek Retellings, especially Mythos and Heroes. Whilst Troy was still enjoyable, it was of course the story I am most familiar with of the lot. Odyssey continues in completely the same vein. The intent is to educate people on the story of the Odyssey through the brilliant, sharp, witty mind of Stephen Fry, not to provide a subversive Greek Retelling.

“Was it possible that mortals were beginning to infect the gods with the perverse self-indulgence of inner feelings?”

In light of that, I highly recommend Odyssey, as well as the previous three instalments, to anyone that is not incredibly familiar with these mythological tales. If you do not know the intricate details before diving into this, I believe almost everyone will have a great time as they are carried through the pages by the genius that is Stephen Fry. An addition to the list of the books I would recommend listening to more than physically reading, as Fry narrates the story himself, adding comedic timing to his magnetic writing.

4/5 STARS
Profile Image for Fadi Antwan.
144 reviews97 followers
Want to read
February 1, 2021
Holy sh*t, I decided to look this up on a whim (wishful thinking, more like), and apparently it's listed on a few places??? No idea if it's real, but I'm just going to pretend that it is. Now excuse me while I go into hibernation waiting for it.
7 reviews4 followers
September 24, 2022
i think in homers next book he should try a modern setting. the whole ancient greece thing is getting old.
Profile Image for Lisa.
420 reviews87 followers
March 5, 2025
Stephen Fry performed the audiobook and it is wonderful! Odysseus is a “great warrior hero: Odysseus of Ithaca…the schemer, the hero, the winner of the Trojan War”.

I’ve read a number of variations on The Odyssey over the last couple years and I loved the point of view taken from the woman’s point of view (see Penelope and Clytemnestra ).

This version again takes the traditional perspective of Odysseus, but in the epilogue Fry does admit:
Trying to present the Odyssey as the story of a faithful loving husband yearning for his beloved wife is all very well. But given his propensity to father children by women beginning with “C” alone…we have to appraise Odysseus against standards of marital fidelity and monogamy rather different from our own.


Fry weaves in useful context, and wonderful tidbits of language throughout (for instance, the origin of the word “pylon”, and “planet”.)

This was charming and elegant, told by a master storyteller. I’m eager to read the rest of this series.
Profile Image for Kate O'Shea.
1,275 reviews184 followers
October 18, 2024
The story of the world's most delayed husband is the subject of the final part of Stephen Fry's superlative interpretation of Greek myths. I wasn't too keen on Troy but that's probably because the story is a bit dull - good looking guy "kidnaps" good looking girl then other men go to war for 10 years to get her back - dull no?

However The Odyssey is the story of Odysseus/Ulysses who, having brilliantly won the Trojan War for the Greeks, decides to absolve himself of all decision-making responsibilities and rely on his thoroughly unreliable men to get him home. You'd imagine after the first time they'd steered him wrong that he'd stop listening to them, but Odysseus is such an idiot that he continues to make the same mistake. Consequently, despite being warned several times, he ends up (after various deadly adventures) stuck on an island with the sorceress Calypso for 7 years.

The wonderful thing about the delectabke
Mr Fry is that he injects humour into these stories, he makes them interesting and relevant and I could frankly listen to his dulcet tones every night. I'm saddened that this is the last one.

Of course I've read other Greek retellings and if you want alternative views of the Trojan War I'd highly recommend Natalie Haynes "A Thousand Ships" and for a brilliant look at things from Odysseus' wife, Penelope's, point of view I'd recommend Claire North's interpretation of The Penelopiad (Ithaca, House of Odysseus and Last Song of Penelope).

But Stephen Fry's Greek myths have all been wonderful - Mythos is still my favourite but Heroes and Troy is excellent too. Odyssey is the perfect finish.
Profile Image for J M Notter.
79 reviews13 followers
March 5, 2025
Very entertaining re-telling of Homer's Odyssey in an arty presentation. Thank the Gods for the useful appendix (Greek names aren't my strength).
Profile Image for Ivy.
2 reviews
August 9, 2021
Holy crap I didnt know this was even possible it had better come out soon even though hes obviously really busy. The audiobooks of these are really good, he does it himself. (He also sounds like david attenborough if you hadnt noticed?)
Profile Image for Rozhan Sadeghi.
310 reviews453 followers
November 29, 2024
۳.۵/۵

«وقتی آهنگِ ایتاک داری، راه
گو که دور باش و دراز،
سرشار از تجربه سرشارِ ماجرا.»

نوشتن این یادداشت آسان نبود. شاید به همین دلیل، تا توانستم آن را به تأخیر انداختم. نوشتنش به معنای خداحافظی بود؛ با صدای مخملی استیون فرای که این سال‌ها در گوشم از اساطیر یونان می‌گفت. قصه‌هایی که سال‌ها پیش مرا مسحور این جهان شگفت‌انگیز کردند. خداحافظی با بازگشت دوباره‌ام به این صدا، وقتی که یادم آورد چرا اسطوره‌ها و خواندن و نوشتن درباره‌شان را دوست دارم. خداحافظی با چهار کتابی که داستانشان از گایا و اورانوس آغاز شد و با اودیسه و پنلوپه به پایان رسید. تجربه‌ی خواندن و شنیدن این کتاب‌ها، آن‌هم با صدای نویسنده، از خوشبختی‌های بزرگ زندگی‌ام بود.

اما کتاب چهارم، کتاب آخر، قصه‌ی اودیسه

کنستانتین کاوافی شعری دارد به نام ایتاک (که ترجمه‌ی بیژن الهی از آن را ابتدای یادداشت آوردم) و این کتاب نیز با همان شعر آغاز می‌شود. شعری که به‌خوبی ارزش ایتاک برای اودیسه را نشان می‌دهد. ایتاک، همان مقصد نهایی است؛ بهشت و غایتی که هر کدام از ما در ذهنمان می‌سازیم، زمینی که در آن آرام خواهیم گرفت، یک بار و برای همیشه. در این سفر نباید تعجیل کرد، نباید از قدم بازایستاد، نباید ترسید و نباید امید را از دست داد. باید چشم دوخت به چراغ سبزی که از آن سوی آب‌ها و دریاها به ما چشمک می‌زند.

و من مشتاقانه می‌خواستم که از این سفر بخوانم. این کتاب و در واقع اودیسه‌ای که هومر آن را تألیف کرده بیش از آنکه صرفاً گزارشی از سفر بازگشت اودسئوس به خانه‌اش ایتاک باشد، گزارشی پراکنده از اتفاقات پس از جنگ تروا است. پراکندگی این روایت هرچند ناشی از منبع اصلی است، اما امید داشتم با شیطنت، طنازی و البته قصه‌گویی منحصر‌به‌فردی که از استیون فرای سراغ دارم معجزه‌ای در داستان رخ دهد و قصه‌ی بازگشت این قهرمان را کمی برایم جذاب‌تر کند. گله‌ای نیست، او وفادار بوده به متن اصلی و همین می‌تواند اتفاقاً ارزش کارش باشد اما با پیش‌فرض‌هایی که من از کتاب و از فرای داشتم، کمی فاصله داشت.

اما بیش از آن، ایتاک و پنلوپه‌ای که در آن به انتظار بازگشت اودیسه زندگی می‌کند در چند ماه گذشته و شاید در چند سال پیش‌رو به درون‌مایه‌ی قصه‌ی زندگی خودم تبدیل شده‌اند. از این روست که شاید نه این کتاب اما قطعا این «قصه» برایم مهم و تاثیرگذار است. برای همین این چند ماه شعر کاوافی را مدام زیر لب زمزمه می‌کنم و به خاطر دارم که باید همیشه فکر ایتاک باشم. چراکه مقصد نهایی‌ست، مکان وصال است، نوید به ثمر رسیدن عشق؛ همان عشقی که روزهایم را به امیدش سپری می‌کنم.

قصه‌ی اودیسه را هرچند آنطور که می‌خواستم نبود خواندم به این امید که نترسم از لِسْترینگُن‌ها، از تک‌چشم‌ها و از نپتون خشمناک، آن خدای دریاها و بادها. به امید بادهای موافق، بادبان‌های استوار، و سفری که یک‌سره مرا به ایتاکا و عشق برساند.

«همیشه فکر ایتاک باش: هرگز از یاد مبر
که آخرین مقصد توست‌.
اما نشِتاب در سفر.»

پی‌نوشت: در این متن ایتاک را به عنوان مقصد نهایی در نظر گرفته‌ام و پنلوپه و اودیسه را «با اغماض» عاشق و معشوق. در رابطه با این ارتباط حرف‌های بیشتری دارم که در این یادداشت نمی‌گنجد، اما برای درست درآمدن استعاره‌ای که در ذهنم به آن چنگ می‌زنم، حداقل برای مدتی مجبور هستم این دو را عاشق و معشوق در نظر بگیرم. اما آنچه همیشه برای مسلم است، دل‌به‌خواه بودن ایتاک است.
Profile Image for Doublehalfling.
4 reviews1 follower
Want to read
July 11, 2022
It is with eternal sorrow that I say that it won't be out until October '23, not '22 as stated above.

I requested a proof copy from the Penguin and was given this devastating and contrary news. Woe is me...
Profile Image for Shaghayegh.
364 reviews107 followers
October 3, 2024
این مجموعه تمام شد
واقعا یکی از بهترین مجموعه‌هایی بود که از اساطیر یونان خوندم.
Profile Image for Stephen.
2,141 reviews456 followers
November 27, 2024
Good retelling of Homer's Odyssey by the author
Profile Image for Trish.
2,374 reviews3,737 followers
September 28, 2024
The 4th and (hopefully not) last of Fry's books retelling Greek mythology has us follow Odysseus on his way home after the Trojan War. Talk about a road trip with road blocks. *lol*



Odysseus has made some divine enemies by coming up with the tactic that brought about Troy's fall, but also through some other in-/actions. Thus, when he and his small fleet sail home, they are stormtossed from island to island and meet cyclopses, sirens, witches, gods and other creatures and people while Odysseus' wife, Penelope, is left home to raise their son alone and, ultimately, fight off a host of impertinent suitors.
To think how much more quickly he could have been home if Poseidon attended all meetings as required and if Odysseus' men had heeded commands (after all the battles fought together, one could have expected better of them)!



Anyway, the story is very well known, but the way Fry tells it is fresh and new, though always faithful to the original and respectful in tone in a way that absolutely befits the original.
Fry's version is also speckled with references to the previous 3 books and the stories retold in those.
And he's once again giving the same kind of cultural references we're used to by now.
So much from history, linguistics and even biology makes more sense if one knows the relation between it all and Fry has a wonderful way of bringing it all together in a holistic way.

A wonderful breakdown of this massive tale that jumps from here to there and even from the "present day" to flashbacks and then the future.
Honestly, I had not known the correct order (from the original) since all the versions I encountered to far seem to have streamlined the plot - which is the wrong thing to do since it makes the reader miss some important connections (not to mention that the original way the story was told is more thrilling and has sorts of cliffhangers and a better flow within the story).
Stephen Fry guiding us through all the disasters, betrayals, ensanarements, intrigues and quests and in the order they are said to have occurred, was comforting and brilliant.

I have both the wonderfully shiny (and signed) hardcover

but I also listened to the audiobook because the author narrated it himself and his voice is like a drug (without any negative side-effects) to me.

Gorgeous voyage through history and mythology, rich with details and told in a magnificent way. Read it! I know you'll love it!



P.S.: My only regret is that I didn't take my time reading this book and posting many funny gifs in the status updates. *lol* It lends itself perfectly to that. Oh well, I can always do that when re-reading this book (which might be soon indeed because it's so good)!
Profile Image for Dylan.
339 reviews
February 12, 2025
Stephen Fry's Greek Retellings is an impressive feat of entertainment while being educationally rich.

There has evidently been an influx of Greek retellings through alternate perspectives after the hugely beloved Madeline Miller novels Circe and The Song of Achilles. Of course it would be silly to suggest there were none prior, in terms of fiction Helen by Margaret George, Lavinia by Ursula K. Le Guin, and others were critically acclaimed (just didn’t capture the market akin to Madeline Miller). This is not even mentioning the many retellings during the ancient days.

Stephen Fry’s retelling of these great myths isn’t here to provide a drastically different perspective, it’s not even a fictional retelling creating a modern twist, inventing things that weren’t in the original sources. This is pretty much a nonfictional book, retelling these narratives as accurately as possible with Fry’s modern language, wit, and so forth. The best equivalent would be Mythology by Edith Hamilton. However, Edith is better versed in terms of teaching, as the sources are there (better reference material), retellings are short and concise (which I say to its detriment), and Edith caps it off with her intelligence and insight.

Diving into Homer can be very overwhelming because there are so many references to tales outside of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Furthermore, it could be difficult to introduce people to the myths with Hesiod or Ovid’s writings. Stephen Fry is the solution. It isn’t perfect, but it’s damn excellent in what it intends to achieve. You can’t help but be enraptured by it all. Fry’s bouncing between so many different sources so smoothly, providing extra context through footnotes and so forth. I was somewhat hesitant reading this one because a friend of mine didn’t like it nearly as much as the others, but thankfully that wasn’t the case for me.

That said, this felt less impressive than Troy because of the abundance of sources there in comparison to this book. Here we got Odyssey, Agamemnon (plays by many playwrights of that time), and Aeneid, and maybe others (Telegony is touched upon) I haven’t noticed or simply forgot. In terms of the story, it retells well; it’s the Odyssey and various plays of Agamemnon, so yes, it’s wonderful to read. Fry’s conversational style, I think, was the best suited for Mythos because of the nature of the material, but I still enjoyed it how it was deployed here. I really enjoyed the last two chapters with Fry’s overall musings about certain topics and the series existence and caps off this great series wonderfully.

If I had to highlight a weakness, the conversational writing style can go against the tale Fry is exploring. Character voice can merge and feel less distinct (and less bite) because sometimes it’s too modern to its fault. However, this is a very minor grand scheme of things in comparison to its strengths. If you have an emotional anchor to the myths, you feel for characters, you understand the broad plot and the message it evokes, and yeah, a very minor “problem” in terms of the tales as a whole.

In conclusion, Fry’s retelling of Greek myths ends up as a success. It’s a fantastic primer to Greek mythology and everything it entails without sacrificing detail, which is one of the shortcomings of Edith Hamilton's work. When I read Troy many years ago, I read the Iliad soon afterwards, and it was such a wonderful experience, the same will be done again. I’m excited to get into the original tale of Homer after pausing it for so long (for no fault of its quality). I’m glad our generation has these books, as it’s so easy to recommend where to start with Greek myths that are accurate to the originals.

7.5/10
Profile Image for Kirsty.
208 reviews28 followers
September 29, 2024
Rating: 5/5 stars

In this fourth installment, Fry tackles one of the most enduring and beloved tales of classical literature: Homer's Odyssey. True to form, Fry delivers a retelling that is both faithful to the original and refreshingly modern, making the ancient epic accessible and utterly captivating for contemporary readers.

Fry's prose is, as always, a delight. His wit, charm, and erudition shine through every page, bringing the world of Odysseus to vivid life. The author's passion for the material is evident throughout, infusing the narrative with an infectious enthusiasm.

While the book is a joy from start to finish, its only fault might be that it leaves the reader wanting more. As the latest entry in Fry's Greek mythology series, ´Odyssey’ continues a journey that many fans hope will not end here. The depth and breadth of Fry's knowledge, combined with his storytelling prowess, could easily have sustained a work twice as long without losing its appeal.

Pros:
- Masterful retelling of a classic epic
- Fry's witty, engaging prose
- Insightful commentary and contextualisation
- Brings ancient characters to life for modern readers
- Balances humor and gravitas expertly

Cons:
- Leaves readers wanting more (which is hardly a complaint)

Stephen Fry's ´Odyssey’ earns a well-deserved 5 out of 5 stars, standing not only as a superb retelling of Homer's epic but also as a stellar addition to Fry's Greek mythology quartet. In the end, "Odyssey" leaves us with a sense of anticipation - grateful for the journey we've been on with Fry as our guide.
Profile Image for Anirudh Kukreja.
534 reviews6 followers
September 27, 2024
As Stephen Fry reiterated Odyssey, I have no right to judge the book by its story. Often the story is boring, dragged and a bit complicated with names that, don't contribute much to Odysseus's adventures. At the same time, my dude has lived a colorful and interesting life and every time he managed to jump out of a messy situation, one could see his growth as the manipulative and wily (PS he hates that term) King that he was known as.
I have rated this 5 because for Stephen Fry's style of writing, trademark humor and simplification of an otherwise complicated story, without missing out on any important events.
Profile Image for Fien Vermeylen.
50 reviews4 followers
May 22, 2025
Sowieso ben ik al fan van de 'hoofdgedachte' van dit epos: nostos, het Griekse concept voor een lange terugreis naar huis waarin de uiterlijke en innerlijke werelden het personage op de proef stellen. Daarnaast heb ik ook altijd genegenheid gehad voor de Odyssee tegenover andere epi (?), mede omdat dit het laatste verhaal is van de Griekse mythen.

Mijn verwachtingen waren dus hoog. Ik was vooral bang om te cringen van de schrijfstijl en/of verveeld te raken tijdens passages die ik mij nog herinnerde. Maar gelukkig werd ik aangenaam verrast door Stephen Fry's hervertelling. Het is niet makkelijk om een heel oud verhaal leesbaar te maken zonder te overdrijven met "moderne" manieren van spreken, en in mijn ogen heeft hij dat delicaat evenwicht kunnen vinden.

Lowkey mis ik Latijn echt nog nu, en high key hoop ik dat ik al die familiebanden en namen enzo niet direct weer gewoon vergeet.
Also love Penelope 4ever
Profile Image for M. Chéwl.
91 reviews
November 6, 2024
I swear upon the murky waters of the River Styx with thunder-bearing Zeus as my witness - Stephen Fry’s latest instalment in his Greek myths series “Odyssey”, is an excellent book that certainly doesn’t disappoint. Just as the breath of Athena gave life to Pandora, so does Fry’s fecund imagination, as he breathes life into a post-Trojan war cast of characters through a delightful series of narratives.

My favourites included Odysseus marooned on seductress Calypso’s island - where, amidst their insatiable bouts of coitus, Odysseus laments how he really must be getting back to Ithaca… it has been 12 years... But oh go on then, another round won’t hurt surely!

Odysseus then manages to flee only to become captive on another island to the witch “Circe” (the correct pronunciation of her name rhymes with “mercy” according to the footnotes). After an initial misunderstanding, he “persuades” her to undo the spell that cast his men into a pack of swine herd, unwittingly getting her pregnant in the process.

My favourite of all though had to be the tale of Agamemnon, Clytemnestra, Aegisthus and those pesky kids with a penchant for matricide: Orestes and Electra. A story of familial macabre and tragedy second only perhaps to Oedipus Rex. The source material taken from Aeschylus’ “Oresteia”, is brilliantly brought to life by Fry, culminating in the trial of Orestes at the Areopagus, where, (spoiler alert) Athena intervenes and not only exonerates the lad, but exorcises him of the Furies that have been hitherto inflicting psychological torture on him.

Indeed, just like that filicidal old git Tantalus in the underworld, forever grasping for fruit that he cannot reach and stooping to quench his thirst on water that always receeds - I too felt ‘tantalised’ and left wanting more after reading this book! I am already looking forward to listening to the audiobook version. 5 stars.
Profile Image for Panda .
815 reviews39 followers
June 22, 2025
Audiobook (11 hours) narrated by the author, Stephen Fry
Publisher: Chronicle Books

Stephen Fry is a beloved and award winning narrator, perhaps most known for his narration of the UK version of the complete Harry Potter series of books.
His narration and the audio of this novel are flawless.

This is the fourth book of the mythology series written and narrated by Stephen Fry.

In this edition we mostly hear of the tales of Odysseus with a bit a narrative of a few others, like Scylla.

Thus far, the first book of the series has been my favorite, however all of them have been decent and this one was done very well.

Anyone who enjoys Greek Mythology, should consider taking a look. Although the books are in a series, there isn't a reason to read them in any particular order or if you were to be a fan of just Odysseus, you could certainly just read this book as a one off.
Profile Image for Tanya.
574 reviews334 followers
October 3, 2025
As a child, I was positively obsessed with the Odyssey, so I know the story very well… but to my delight, the fourth and final book in Stephen Fry’s series of Greek Myths was captivating and fresh, because it wasn’t the straight retelling of the titular Homeric source I had been expecting. Fry picks up right where he left off: The Trojan War has been won, the city sacked, Helen retrieved, and the surviving Greeks are now preparing to sail home to their respective kingdoms… and it’s perfectly fair to say that some will have a much easier time of it than others. By masterfully weaving in parts of Aeschylus’ Oresteia and other tragedies, Fry ties up the stories of all the returning Achaean heroes, thus taking as many detours in his narrative as Odysseus does on his twenty-year long struggle to return home to Ithaca.

My favorite tangent was Agamemnon’s homecoming and the cycle of bloody retribution that follows—we don’t properly get to Odysseus until somewhere around the halfway mark. To my shame, this is how I learned that modern retellings tend to streamline the Odyssey; the original is actually one of literature’s first fragmented narratives, starting in medias res and making ample use of flashbacks. Fry staying true to the original structure worked for me because I know the story so well and his enthusiasm carried me right along, but I could see how readers unfamiliar with these myths may feel storm-tossed by the non-linearity and many tangents.

I have always preferred the Odyssey over the Iliad because it’s the more timeless and relatable tale: It’s about the longing for home, perseverance, redemption… and sweet, sweet revenge. However, even Fry can’t twist the source enough to paint Odysseus as a loyal, loving husband: While his wife is staving off impertinent suitors who are trying to usurp his throne, he is fathering children all over the Mediterranean. So, to make the story at least a little less morally ambiguous, he ends up conveniently omitting the hanging of Penelope’s handmaids.

The prose is designed to make the tale more accessible to modern audiences too, and is injected with humor. Fry’s passion for the material shines through in every charming, vivid sentence, as well as the occasional flashes of poetry… and, as usual, there’s a lot of footnotes-action. Many refer back to relevant stories from the previous books or clarify pronunciations, but the best are always the one where he digresses and goes into linguistics, idioms, or offers up various theories. I loved the afterword, which dips its toes into Virgil’s Aeneid while nicely tying up the narrative arc of this Greek Myths series: From titans, gods, demigods, heroes, and mortals in whose affairs the gods frequently and freely meddled, by the end of this fourth volume, Fry has successfully guided us to the cusp of an era in which mankind had to find its own way.

“Humankind moved on from the gods, the gods no longer appeared before us or demanded sacrifice of us, no longer mated with us, commanded us, cursed us or cast us up to the heavens as constellations. Except they are still here. Whenever we find our reason wrangling with our instinct, Apollo and Dionysus are contending within us. We contain them all: The cheek and cheerfulness of Hermes, the wisdom of Athena, the rage if Ares, the homeliness of Hestia, the craft of Hephaestus, the pride and propriety of Hera, the majesty of Zeus and the capricious inconsistency, beauty, savagery, insight, glory and madness of the whole blessed pantheon.”

—————

My reviews of Stephen Fry's Greek Myths series:

01: Mythos · ★★★★
02: Heroes · ★★★
03: Troy · ★★★★
04: Odyssey · ★★★★
Profile Image for Emily Hird.
84 reviews2 followers
October 16, 2024
Well done Stephen Fry in a great accessible series on Greek mythology. I’ve followed since the first book came out and I do feel a sense of accomplishment to have finished it! Overall, the series has been really enjoyable but I can’t help but to feel it ended with the least enjoyable one. Now that isn’t to say the book is bad because it isn’t. I just really enjoyed the first two. Absolutely loved Troy so to be this one fell a bit flat.

I listened to the audiobook for this one and as always Stephen is incredible at bringing the story to life. He truly is one of the best voice actors I’ve ever heard when it comes to audio book. I found the book really easy to follow which is great because the Odyssey and other retelling of it can sometimes feel very confusing or overwhelming. There were moments I really enjoyed like his time with the Cyclops and Circe. These parts kept me hooked and wanting more.

Unfortunately, there were a few other parts that I found a little boring. The pacing of this books struggled at times and it did feel at point like it was being dragged out or extended to ensure the book reached a certain length. I was also a little confused when he went on a little rant at the end about AI but fair play if that’s his point of view.

Overall, I do really recommend this series and if you’ve read the others in the series already you should definitely finish it! However, if I am completely honest, I felt this one just didn’t have the magic of the first three and definitely didn’t capture me the same way Troy did.
31 reviews1 follower
August 11, 2021
I already know this will be a slam dunk based on the other books. Can I just time travel to get it and start listening to it now? Can't wait for Fry's Odyssey interpretation.
Profile Image for Claire .
427 reviews62 followers
April 21, 2025
Greek and Roman heroes, gods and goddesses have been part of my world for over fifty years. I even taught them to my students in high school. I was really curious to read how Stephen Fry would organise the retelling of this story. This novel is not only the retelling of the original Odyssee, it also enlightens us on the sea adventures of several other heroes from the Trojan war. The sad homecoming of Agamemnon and the wandering of his children are taken largely from the Greek tragedy writers; the long journey on sea Aeneas embarks on was told by the Roman writer Vergilius. But the centre of the book of course is Odysseus who travels all seas, encounters many setbacks and is a toy in the hands of rivalrous gods. Odysseus who longs so much for his home on Ithaca, but sometimes does not do everything he can to get there. And 20 years away is a long time.
I found the retelling very gracious, lighthearted and excellently written. I like the humour, the variation and the puns. What disturbed me is using Greek and Roman names for gods in the same book. It is hard enough to follow these different Greek names and I think the sudden use of the Roman names was at least unnecessary.
Also I found the story a bit too black/white. Agamemnon was not an innocent bystander, Penelope’s character has much more depth, Odysseus is not flawless.
But as an introduction or first reading of the Odyssee it is an excellent book.
Profile Image for  Irma Sincera.
202 reviews111 followers
November 15, 2024
Būsiu sulūžusi plokštelė, bet ši knygų serija yra must read, nesvarbu ar mėgstat mitologiją ar ji skamba jums nuobodžiai. Taip parašytos knygos turėtų būti privalomos skaityti jau mokykloje ir garantuoju, kad visiems kažkas galvose pasiliktų. At this point aš turiu būti dėkinga Stephen Fry už visas savo graikų mitologijos žinias, nes jis vienintelis sugebėjo viską perteikti įtraukiančiai, šmaikščiai, bet nesupaprastintai iki minimumo. Ir aš tiesiog gyvenime day to day jaučiu naudą to, kai kokiam quiz šou pateikiami klausimai ta tema ar kitoje knygoje yra koks reference į mitologinius personažus.
Profile Image for Aldi.
1,356 reviews101 followers
December 29, 2024
3.5 stars rated up. I continue to not really get on with audiobooks but Stephen Fry remains one of the very few exceptions. Listening to him perform the Greek myths (because it’s definitely much more than “read” when he does it!) has been a genuine pleasure.

This one was probably my least favourite of the four but that’s due to the source material and not for lack of entertainment value on Fry’s part. I found the early parts where we follow the fate of most of the players from the Trojan War a bit of a slog, while the rest suffered from overfamiliarity; I’ve heard and read and seen Odysseus’ story many times before and this is a retelling, not a reinvention.

Stephen’s voice(s) definitely brought it all to life superbly and the snarky asides helped a lot, it’s just that at the end of the day I find Odysseus a trying character to spend a lot of time with. If he could spend a little less time getting all his men killed, fishing for praise for himself while in disguise, taking credit for schemes some goddess came up with for him, and shagging his way across the world while his wife’s supposed to wait forever and be the epitome of faithfulness, maybe. But honestly, all that and then the constant whining about people calling him wily and a lying liar who lies? Give me a break, my dude. But mad kudos to Stephen Fry for once again turning storied figures from millennia ago into real characters I can get genuinely exasperated with, lol.
Profile Image for Wee Lassie.
377 reviews97 followers
October 8, 2025
That was a weird ending … did Stephen Fry just go on a rant about AI and compared it favourably to the Greek Gods? I think … I think I may have hit my head because surely that didn’t happen.
Profile Image for Robert Lambregts.
771 reviews28 followers
September 30, 2025
This is the 4th book in the Stephen Fry series about the Greek Mythology. You don't have to read the other books to enjoy this one, but there are references to the other myths that have been part of Mythos, Heroes and Troy, so if you want to start these books just start where Fry started and really dive into the experience.

Because an experience it surely is. Stephen Fry is one of my favorite storytellers when it comes to the Greek Mythology and that's basically because he knows how to tell a story in a juicy way.
He doesn't shy away from any topic and his tone of voice is marvelous. That makes the reading experience extremely pleasant and enjoyable.
I have read all the books in order and I feel this might even be my favorite, but that's maybe also because I'm now used to his writing style.
It is very approachable, enjoyable even if mythology is not normally your thing and packed with action and intrige.
I'm rating this one 5 stars. A classic about the classics, what can I say. I am already looking forward to revisit them all.
Profile Image for Noah Weiser.
38 reviews
June 11, 2025
I should’ve been a classics major :/. Anyways I marked as TBD 2 years ago!!! I loved this book and this author and really brings me back to my Greek mythology days. I remember reading bits and pieces of the Odyssey in high school and I used to get Odysseus and Oedpius confused. Anyways this was a great novel. My only complaint is that it took 2 years. I almost wish i re-read Mythos, Heroes, and Troy before I read this just because one book starts right where the previous one ended and there are so many characters, places, and concepts to keep track of. I also wish i read this a little faster but anyways this book was worth the 2 year wait.
Profile Image for kristyn ˏˋ°•*⁀➷.
531 reviews160 followers
June 27, 2025
I ALREADY MISS THIS SERIES!!!!! i love stephen fry sm and and his writing style. i will forever refer back to these books because they were so well researched and written. they are definitely on my purchase list and i will love to reread these again!
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