Tales from Ovid
Ted Hughes
When Michael Hofmann and James Lasdun's ground-breaking anthology After Ovid (also Faber) was published in 1995, Hughes's three contributions to the collective effort were nominated by most critics as outstanding. He had shown that rare translator's gift for providing not just an accurate account of the original, but one so thoroughly imbued with his own qualities that it was as if Latin and English poetwere somehow the same person. Tales from Ovid , which went on to win the Whitbread Prize for Poetry, continued the project of recreation with 24 passages, including the stories of Phaeton, Actaeon, Echo and Narcissus, Procne, Midas and Pyramus and Thisbe. In them, Hughes's supreme narrative and poetic skills combine to produce a book that stands, alongside his Crow and Gaudete , as an inspired addition to the myth-making of our time.
Tags
Categorised as:
Poetry
Sub-categories:
Poetry Collections
Genres & Themes:
Language;
Mythology
The Death of King Arthur
Simon Armitage
The Alliterative Morte Arthure - the title given to a four-thousand line poem written sometime around 1400 - was part of a medieval Arthurian revival which produced ...
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Simon Armitage
When the mysterious Green Knight arrives unbidden at the Round Table one Christmas, only Gawain is brave enough to take up his challenge ...
This story ...
Newsletter Sign-up
Keep in touch with all the latest news and events from Faber Social by signing up for the newsletter. Sign up here.
Free UK P&P
On orders over £25.00 (see conditions)
