DANIEL MENDELSOHN : AN ODYSSEY : A FATHER, A SON AND AN EPIC

Daniel Mendelsohn says, “There is no point of singularity to stories. Its the author  who selects the point from which to jump-start his story; and from that point of view he can sidle either ways in time, covering the past and the future  as befits his purpose.  A story on its own accord does not have an opening scene. The author  bestows this.”

Reading Mendelsohn  is an education. Hazy memories  of Homer’s Odyssey float back into my memory making me anxious  to read this author’s tome. He carries the credit of being  the foremost literary  critic in the English language. His style  has a levitating,  yet engrossing  effect on the reader. Mendelsohn is deeply informative,  belonging  to a rare clique  of writers whose writing should be compulsory reading

AN ODYSSEY  starts with an eight-page summary of the book that in a nutshell  covers, like a syllabus  of sorts, his subject.  In here he informs us about the spring semester  in which he taught a seminar  on the Odyssey; about his father sitting-in on those classes; about the Mediterranean cruise they undertook to retrace the mythical route of Odysseus; about his father’s fall in a parking lot; his declining health, and brief period  of recovery  during which he seemed to be back to his “old self”.

Its strange to encapsulate the events that you expect to unfolds gradually,  but he ticks off the major events  like the classical epics that begin with a poem  that announces what the epic is about.

What Mendelsohn delivers is less memoir and more a profile of his father as and himself  as they follow threads in the silk of Homer’s  epic journey. Besides being  a moving father-son relationship, its a book full of rich discussions  on the text, all resulting in a delectable read. The most intriguing  episodes of the Odyssey  act as a launchpad  to share his understanding  of his father who is critical,  acerbic  and reticent.

His bluntness,  but earnest quibbles  with his son lightens  the mood, even though he is a pesky presence  at the lectures. This braiding of the twin strands of narrative  follows the rhythms and techniques  of the Odyssey  itself and gives the book an awe-inspiring congruity with the epic, like taking two sets of jumbled jigsaw  pieces  and making one cogent jigsaw  out of them.

The book’s  truly  satisfying  moments are those in which our own reading of the Odyssey’s many intriguing scenes converge with perspectives of the students at his seminar  which invariably differ from  those of Mendelsohn’s.

It raises the question: Do we always hear what we want to hear, blocking  everything  that tends to contradict our judgement?

Reading this book you will gain  fresh competency in the epic tale. If you’ are basically grounded  in Homer, you’re bound to come off more deeply  informed. Its all there; marriage, identity, family, recognition, disguise,  education,  loyalty,  sacrifice….

 There is mastery in the way Mendelsohn  makes the connections, seamlessly  and expertly,  picking apart and linking back, the events both from life and the Odyssey,  to highlight  their significance.  He embeds stories within stories  to go back and forth in time, switching from fiction to real life.

An exceptional read.

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