Beowulf On The Beach, by Jack Murnighan - Excerpt
Beowulf On The Beach, by Jack Murnighan - Excerpt
Beowulf On The Beach, by Jack Murnighan - Excerpt
BEOWULF
on the
BEACH
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BEOWULF
on the
BEACH
WHAT to LOVE
and WHAT to SKIP in
LITERATURES
50 GREATEST HITS
Jack Murnighan
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Three Rivers Press and the Tugboat design are registered trademarks of
Random House, Inc.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First Edition
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Contents
Preface 1
v
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vi Contents
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Contents vii
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viii Contents
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Preface
1
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This isnt Cliff s Notes telling you what youd need for school;
its an attempt to show you whats in the great books that makes
them really matter. Its tragic how many of us think back on what
we read in college and feel, like T. S. Eliot wrote in Four Quartets,
that we had the experience but missed the meaning. But if I
have my way, youll soon be adding some classics to the books
you love the most.
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HOMER
(c. 900 B.C.)
The Iliad
3
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The Iliad 5
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The Iliad 7
Now that weve got that all sorted out, you should have no
trouble relishing the origin and apex of virility lit. Hollywood
can send out its Stallone and Schwarzenegger myths of all-meat
masculinity, but if you want it rough, tough, and literate, Homer
has the first and last word.
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The Iliad 9
What to Skip: By and large The Iliad makes for a brisk, white-
knuckle read, but there are a few passages that lag. Dont worry
if you jump ahead at II, 494759 (a list of warriors and where
they came from) and IX, 52999 (story of an unrelated side bat-
tle). You wont miss anything.
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HOMER
(c. 900 B.C.)
The Odyssey
S o youve just composed the poem that 2,800 years later will
still be considered the greatest action story ever; where do
you go from there? Its hard not to feel for Homertalk about
being set up for a sophomore slump. But assuming he is the one
who wrote The Odyssey, Greeces greatest poet triumphed again
his second time around, managing to come up with one of the
better follow-up plots this side of The Empire Strikes Back.
Having already chronicled the ultra-manly warrior Achilles,
this time Homer gives us a hero of a very different stripe.
Odysseus is studly, sure, but hes more famous for being finagling
and wily (he is sometimes called Polytroposa Greek way of
saying he of the honeyed tongue). The Odyssey tells of
Odysseus struggle to get back from Troy to his home in Ithaca
(Greece, not upstate New York). Its the archetypal tale of wan-
dering, of trials and tribulations, detours and deferrals, menac-
ing sea monsters and horndog goddesses who just wont let him
out of their bowers of bliss. We follow the crafty one (called
Ulysses by the Romans, giving Joyce his title), who, having al-
ready spent ten years away from his wife and son in the sacking
of Troy, loses another ten being buffeted around isles mythic and
real, all because he managed to tick off the sea god Poseidon
10
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The Odyssey 11
clearly not a good idea when youre trying to sail back to your
fatherland.
All the while, dozens of suitors are assailing Odysseus wife,
Penelope, and more or less turning Odysseus house into a Cor-
nell frat: eating up his livestock, guzzling down his cellar, and
being insolent and cavalier in the extreme. But their day is com-
ing; oh, is it coming. Time and again were told that there will be
some serious reckoning when the big O gets back; in fact, one of
the great joys of The Odyssey is reading the various lines de-
scribing what the suitors are in for (If they ever see that man
return to Ithaca, they will pray they are nimbler on their feet;
They do not know the black fate that is near them, to destroy
them in a single day, etc.). As with Achilles wrath in The Iliad,
we know theres an ass-whupping on the horizon, but Homer
makes us wait, letting the bloodthirsty anticipation build and
build in the minds of whats now almost three millennia of read-
ers. In Achilles tale, it takes him a full 17 books (of 24) before he
goes and puts the smackdown on the Trojans; in The Odyssey, it
takes Odysseus 21 books (again out of 24) before he makes it
home and begins waxing those pesky suitors. In both cases, even
though the grim results have long since been announced, we still
turn Homers pages, getting more and more antsy for the he-
roes to show us their chops.
Beyond salivating for the suitors comeuppance, the other key
to enjoying The Odyssey is to read it like youre watching a movie.
Like its big brother, The Iliad, its exceptionally cinematic (it has
been adapted, in part or whole, numerous times. The best
though the connections are pretty thinis the Coen brothers
O Brother Where Art Thou?). Although Odysseus is forever re-
counting his tribulations, hes a pretty efficient storyteller; the
dialogue tends toward the spare and the action speedy, so its
important that you let the reel run on your cerebral scrim as
you read. To get the most out of The Odyssey, you really have to
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The Odyssey 13
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Proteus: A god who can take any shape; thus the adjective
protean, meaning like a chameleon or changeable in any
situation.
Scylla and Charybdis: These two incarnate the dilemma of
having to pick the lesser of two evils. Charybdis is a
whirlpool that will probably kill your whole crew, Scylla a
sea monster that will eat a six-pack of your men as you
pass. You have to go by one or the other on the trip from
Troy to Greece (through the Strait of Messina); which do
you choose? Odysseus picks Scylla, pays the six-man toll
(he knew he wouldnt be one of them), and moves on.
The Sirens: Their singing is irresistible and leads men to their
graves. Odysseus shipmates plug their ears with wax, but
el capitan has himself tied to the mast of the ship so he can
hear what the singing sounds like without diving into the
water after them. Sadly, Homer doesnt describe it. Im
thinking Maria Callas.
Tiresias: A soothsayer, one of the souls of the dead in Hades
that Odysseus calls forth to tell him of the future. In life,
Tiresias was turned into a woman for smacking a pair of
snakes with a stick while they were getting it on (dont
mess with natures way!). Having been a woman for a
while, he was then asked who receives more sexual plea-
sure, men or women. He said that women receive ten times
as much. Zeus wife, Hera, got mad that he revealed
womens secret and blinded him. Later he is turned back to
a man. None of this is recounted in The Odyssey, however
(he comes up in various Greek tragedies); here he simply
tells Odysseus how to make it home easier.
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The Odyssey 15
Quirky Fact: To escape from the cyclops, the Greeks tied them-
selves to the bellies of thick-fleeced sheepbound three together
per manand Odysseus hid himself under a giant ram. When
the blinded Polyphemus gropes the animals, he feels nothing and
sends them out of the cave to forage, allowing the men escape.
When in danger, hide under sheep!
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What to Skip: You can safely skip all of Books III (a side story by
the king Nestor on the death of Agamemnon) and VII (a lot of
unnecessary court ceremony); then Books XI, 230319 (refer-
ences to many of the dead that Odysseus sees, none of which are
vital to the story); XIV, 184364 (Odysseus false tale to the
swineherd Eumaeusgratuitous); XIX, 395466 (more court
ceremony); and XXIV to line 205 (the god Hermes leading the
dead suitors to Hades).
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1. Use a pen.
In the act of taking notes, youre really taking note. Pick books
that are worth the effort and underline, star, and write in the
margins. Meaning is everywhere; profundity is everywhere;
humor, irony, eros, and wisdom are everywhere, in books as in
life. Dont just let meaning hit yougo find it.
2. Read slowly.
Dont ever let a sentence go by without fully processing it.
Too often we drift through paragraphs, sometimes focusing,
sometimes not, but still letting our eyes run down the page. With
books that merit the attention, slow-read every sentence, all the
time. If you miss a line, turn around. Dont let anything escape.
3. Reread.
Dont have literary one-night stands. Go back again and
again; the really good ones get better and better. Instead of there
being a lot of books out there that you barely know, pick a few
and love them well.
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