Discover how one 3,000-year-old story shaped the books we read, the movies we watch, the games we play, and our very idea of what it means to be a hero.Homer’s
Odyssey is one of the greatest adventure stories ever told. Filled with shipwrecks, monsters, gods, temptation, cunning, and one man’s desperate struggle to return home, it has captivated audiences for nearly three thousand years. But the story of Odysseus did far more than survive. It became a blueprint for storytelling itself.
In
The Odyssey Effect, classicist Erica Stevenson reveals the astonishing influence of Homer’s epic across centuries of art and culture, from Ancient Greece to the Renaissance and from James Joyce and Margaret Atwood to Hollywood, Broadway, television, and video games. As a new generation prepares to encounter the story through Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated film adaptation, discover how artists and storytellers have continually reinvented
The Odyssey to explore our deepest ideas about heroism, identity, power, temptation, loyalty, and home.
Richly illustrated, engaging, and accessible,
The Odyssey Effect traces the epic’s extraordinary cultural journey through:
- Iconic literary retellings by Dante, Cervantes, Tennyson, James Joyce, and others
- Film, television, and theatrical adaptations, from the Coen Brothers to The Simpsons and SpongeBob SquarePants
- Centuries of art, philosophy, theater, music, and popular culture
- Modern retellings that challenge and reimagine who gets to be the hero
- The enduring themes that continue to make this ancient story feel startlingly relevant today
Perfect for lovers of Greek mythology, ancient history, classic literature, pop culture, and modern mythological retellings,
The Odyssey Effect reveals why we keep returning to the same ancient story and what each new interpretation tells us about the culture that created it.
Homer’s epic is not simply a relic of the ancient world. It is a living story that continues to shape how we tell stories, understand heroes, and imagine the journey home.