"AN ENGAGING INTRODUCTION TO A FASCINATING TOPIC .
She lives in the U.
K..
The Gods of Olympus is her first trade book.
A professor of classics at Durham University, Graziosi is also a contributor to The Times Higher Education Supplement , the London Review of Books , and BBC radio programs on the arts.
In 2011, she provided the introduction and notes for a new translation of the Iliad for Oxford World\'s Classics.
About the Author: BARBARA Graziosi is the author of Inventing Homer and Homer in the Twentieth Century , among other works.
Drawing on a wide range of literary and archaeological sources, The Gods of Olympus opens a new window on the ancient world and its lasting influence.
In a lively, original history of mythology, Barbara Graziosi offers the first account to trace the wanderings of these inventive deities through the millennia.
And in the Renaissance, they triumphantly emerged as ambassadors of a new, secular belief in humanity.
Under Christianity and Islam they survived as demons, allegories, and planets.
In Egypt, the Olympian Gods claimed to have given birth to pharaohs; in Rome, they led respectable citizens into orgiastic rituals of drink and sex.
Yet for all their foibles and flaws, they proved to be tough survivors, far outlasting their original worshippers.
Graziosi NARRATES THE MANY METAMORPHOSES OF THE GREEK Gods WITH HUMOR AND ERUDITION."-- The Christian Science Monitor The Gods of Olympus are the most colorful characters of Greek civilization: even in antiquity, they were said to be cruel, oversexed, mad, or just plain silly. . . "AN ENGAGING INTRODUCTION TO A FASCINATING TOPIC