The Iliad of Homer
Homer
Lu par StephenC
"The Iliad is an epic poem in dactylic hexameters, traditionally attributed to Homer. Set in the Trojan War, the ten-year siege of Ilium, by a coalition of Greek States, it tells of the battles and events during the weeks of a quarrel between King Agamemnon and the warrior Achilles. Although the story covers only a few weeks in the final year of the war, the Iliad mentions or alludes to many of the Greek legends about the siege" (Summary from Wikipedia) (15 hr 40 min)
Chapitres
| 01 - Book the First | 45:55 | Lu par StephenC |
| 02 - Book the Second | 59:06 | Lu par StephenC |
| 03 - Book the Third | 29:32 | Lu par StephenC |
| 04 - Book the Fourth | 34:38 | Lu par StephenC |
| 05 - Book the Fifth | 54:43 | Lu par StephenC |
| 06 - Book the Sixth | 33:14 | Lu par StephenC |
| 07 - Book the Seventh | 30:10 | Lu par StephenC |
| 08 - Book the Eighth | 34:22 | Lu par StephenC |
| 09 - Book the Ninth | 45:21 | Lu par StephenC |
| 10 - Book the Tenth | 33:38 | Lu par StephenC |
| 11 - Book the Eleventh | 49:50 | Lu par StephenC |
| 12 - Book the Twelfth | 26:35 | Lu par StephenC |
| 13 - Book the Thirteenth | 47:55 | Lu par StephenC |
| 14 - Book the Fourteenth | 30:05 | Lu par StephenC |
| 15 - Book the Fifteenth | 43:45 | Lu par StephenC |
| 16 - Book the Sixteenth | 49:15 | Lu par StephenC |
| 17 - Book the Seventeenth | 42:40 | Lu par StephenC |
| 18 - Book the Eighteenth | 35:05 | Lu par StephenC |
| 19 - Book the Nineteenth | 24:22 | Lu par StephenC |
| 20 - Book the Twentieth | 28:22 | Lu par StephenC |
| 21 - Book the Twenty-First | 34:26 | Lu par StephenC |
| 22 - Book the Twenty-Second | 29:59 | Lu par StephenC |
| 23 - Book the Twenty-Third | 50:15 | Lu par StephenC |
| 24 - Book the Twenty-Fourth | 47:12 | Lu par StephenC |
Critiques
good stuff
R
grateful for the audiobook. haters on the reader know nothing. dont complain. act. where is ur reading?
A Great Recording
A LibriVox Listener
The recording quality is very good. The translation uses Roman names, but that's an easy obstacle to overcome. Easy and enjoyable to listen to.
A LibriVox Listener
I am in no way a "hater" but this reader is so obnoxious that he manages to completely obliterate this masterpiece. Why is it necessary to savagely shout into the microphone???
A LibriVox Listener
Narrator had no excitement or anything. Didn't get past the second part. Monotone is not a good quality for a Narrator.
The Iliad the way it should be
aimzzz
StephenC's excellent reading brings the soldiers and gods to life. He uses the <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/22382" rel="nofollow">Buckley translation of the Iliad</a> which I hadn't read, but I prefer it to the one I used in the past. All in all, very well done. If you are new to The Iliad, it helps to refer to a list of the main characters and gods as a reminder of who they are & which side they are on. (for example, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iliad#The_major_characters" rel="nofollow">Wikipedia link</a>. There are many other such lists.) Also expect graphic descriptions of battle scenes. Stick with it and you will find that there is much more in this ancient epic.
Bellona?????????
Jemcrafter1
Aardvark is right! Bellona is a fully Roman goddess and has no Greek equivalent. The Iliad is a Greek story and I can't take the Roman gods/goddesses. I am a good reader too, but, really?
great!!
Angela98
Great book! I love the narrator, he was very amusing with the voice of Helen. I love the old literature. Thanks librivox for all the great books keep it up!
I am grateful to all volunteers. I am hateful of all critics.
David Hiles
I wish I could buy these ignorant critics for what they are worth and sell them for what they think they are worth. Sesumarongi (backwards ingnoramuses)