
Tales of Troy and Greece
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Narrated by:
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Frederick Davidson
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By:
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Andrew Lang
Lang's collection of retold myths includes Jason's quest for the Golden Fleece, and recounts the lives and heroic deeds of two other major figures: Theseus, who slew the Minotaur; and Perseus, who freed the princess Andromeda as one of his many tests, with the helo of the gorgon's head. Perseus, Andromeda, and her parents, Cephus and Cassiopeia, are remembered in the constellations of the summer sky. Not only will theres tales bring to life for children of all ages the quest for good and the struggle against eveil embodied in the myths, they also reveal the roots of characters referenced throughout Western litereature from Shakespeare's time to the present day.
In the true spirit of adventure, Lang dedicated his book to H. Rider Haggard.(P)1997 by Blackstone Audiobooks
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I like that the stories here are simple, without too much worthless detail. I sent back an edition of Ovid because details ruined the story for me. (I don't need to know the names of all of Actaeon's dogs or what body part each one bit into--only that they ate him! Also, that narrator, Charlton Griffin, used a rasping voice to try to sound so ominous or devilish.)
Davidson's voice is even-tempered and clear. I've listened to enough British and French novels that I'm not used to hearing final "r" anyway, and that omission seems to me the most pronounced "British" characteristic of his reading.
Now I can't wait to see the film "Troy" again, because even minor characters will be familiar. I'll recognize Diomedes and know what he's about to do, and when Odysseus steals the luck of Troy, I'll chuckle, remembering his relationship to Antilocus. This is what a clear, organized, uncluttered storytelling has given me.
I'm on my second immersion reading,
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I hate to do this . . .
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Ugh, this narrator is awful!!
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