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Reviews for Euripides: The Complete Plays, Volume II

 Euripides magazine reviews

The average rating for Euripides: The Complete Plays, Volume II based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-11-12 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 5 stars Randall Pyke
This volume contains Andromache, Hekabe, The Supplicant Women, Elektra, and The Madness of Herakles There are two ways to translate Greek drama into English: employ lofty verbiage to convey the exalted nature of the text, or employ casual and common speech to capture the effect of the original Greek on Greek audiences. Dr. Carl R. Mueller has opted for the latter and he achieves it with remarkable success. By rendering Euripides in a very colloquial and plebeian English, Mueller captures that sense of the pedantic would ought to define the ubiquity, if certainly not the art, of Attic tragedy, in that these works were intended for regular enjoyment by regular people. Do not fret, however, as Mueller never veers into OMG Shakespeare territory. Mueller also avoids the faults of No Fear Shakespeare and assumes that his readers are not idiots by shunning entirely explanatory footnotes. He does provide, however, a very helpful appendix of names and places for those in need of a refresher course on Classical personages and places. I would recommend this edition to anyone interested in a quality and yet very comfortable introduction to Greek tragedy. The works of Euripides are valuable not only for their timeless beauty, which Mueller has expertly rendered, but for their timeless value as well; there is much the Greeks may yet teach us.
Review # 2 was written on 2010-06-20 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 5 stars Sean Murphy
Euripides language is poetic and redolent with moral aphorisms, and in many of these fine plays the playwright is at his best; whether redoing the Electra tale, telling the incredibly bleak Hecuba tale, which is a powerful proto-existentialist examination of justice (let us weep for Polyxena), or noting the deserts of suppliants in Suppliant Women, the reader/viewer is transported to the stuff of real life.


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