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Poena Damni #3

Ο Πρώτος Θάνατος

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Το τρίτο μέρος της τριλογίας Poena Damni του Δημήτρη Λυάκου.

58 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1996

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About the author

Dimitris Lyacos

6 books88 followers
Dimitris Lyacos (Greek: Δημήτρης Λυάκος) is a Greek writer best known for the internationally acclaimed Poena Damni trilogy and its prequel Until the Victim Becomes our Own. His genre-defying work interweaves prose, poetry, and drama with themes from philosophy, religion, ritual, and literary tradition, forming a complex narrative rooted in the Western Canon. Lyacos's characters are typically isolated, existential figures navigating dystopian or metaphysical landscapes, reflecting motifs such as the scapegoat, exile, redemption, and the return of the dead.
The trilogy, written over three decades, includes Z213: Exit, With the People from the Bridge, and The First Death, and has been interpreted as post-tragic and allegorical, blending Christian symbolism with elements of modernist and postmodernist literature. Critics have likened Lyacos to James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Cormac McCarthy, citing his synthesis of classical and contemporary styles. His work has been translated into over 20 languages, making it one of the most widely translated Greek literary projects of the 21st century.
Born in Athens, Lyacos studied law and philosophy in Athens, Venice, and London, and now resides between Berlin and Athens. He has lectured worldwide and appeared in major international festivals. Poena Damni is frequently included in university curricula and has garnered significant critical attention. Although a Greek author, his works are published solely in translation. Lyacos is considered Greece’s foremost contemporary writer and a likely Nobel contender, praised for his contribution to postmodern literature and the philosophical exploration of human suffering and transcendence.

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5 stars
123 (71%)
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29 (16%)
3 stars
17 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
2 reviews
January 4, 2012
Really violent stuff, in line with Iliad and Beowulf, in another time and setting or course. The lonely battle of a lost man. Great.
Profile Image for Seb.
449 reviews121 followers
January 11, 2026
"Slaughtered dogs swimming in wilted moats. They freeze solid, bones and pleasured scales. Consequence of a face without a mouth. Thirst for resurrection."

Well that was short. The poems stop at page 23.

They're interesting poems, right up my alley: dark, rough, restless, bleak, unrelenting.
Profile Image for Norat.
12 reviews2 followers
May 19, 2017
Last of the Poena Damni series, this book does justice to the other too. Intense, violent, but also, embedded in our deepest human concerns. The content of the book - a lone castaway struggling to survive on a utterly bare island- lives up to the Greek tragic poets, but has a strength and style of its own, while being at the same time pure and great poetry. You may be shocked by its imagery, but, then again this happens also when your read Homer or Lautreamont. After you have finished it you will probably wonder what else have you read that could be similar to such a unique reading experience.
Profile Image for George.
Author 20 books336 followers
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January 11, 2022
This has some of the strongest writing/imagery in a trilogy that is less fascinating than staring at a wall. This is also the slimmest volume and so, not counting every other blank page and the notes at the end, it's really only 20 pages in length or less. Somehow this trilogy, if you can even call it that, manages to be worse than Mallo's Nocilla. The word 'worse' is too strong for something as bland as these three books. To tweak a famous phrase from physicist Wolfgang Pauli: it's not even bad. Perhaps it would be better in the original Greek, however.
Profile Image for Pinko Palest.
961 reviews48 followers
March 18, 2016
read this in Greek a long time ago. While most tend to be impressed by the author's subject matter - and who wouldn't, what with all the horror - I was struck by his skill: carefully manipulating images but also playing about with any metre one could possibly think of. Gripping stuff!
Author 3 books8 followers
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July 10, 2019
Harder to hook into than Z213: Exit; when your hero starts out dead there's less plain world under the mythopoeia. The difference between poetry and prose, at least in translation. I'm impressed even so.
Profile Image for Jaime Almansa.
Author 6 books3 followers
January 6, 2024
Mucho mejor… sin duda el mejor de los tres. He de reconocer que me ha gustado, aunque tampoco le he encontrado mucho sentido al conjunto. Voy a necesitar que me lo expliquen.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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