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desertcart.com: The Histories (Oxford World's Classics): 9780199535668: Herodotus, Robin Waterfield, Carolyn Dewald: Books Review: The Good Soldier Schweik of antiquity - A grand overarching story embellished with a thousand of pithy anecdotes of varying relevance. It is possible to make big fuss about whether the anecdotes are literally true (in the Schweik case, there were many people wasting the time of their lives really trying to map the anecdotes to real individuals and events) but in the end, it does not matter that much. And as a matter of fact, whatever in this book is possible to confirm one way or another was actually confirmed. You owe it to yourself to read it, it must rate among the 20 most important and at the same time most entertaining books ever written. The translation is lucid, and there are many helpful remarks. Review: History for knowledge - Herodotus is quite the ancient historian; he's full of himself and funny too.


| Best Sellers Rank | #114,639 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #63 in Iran History #81 in Ancient Greek History (Books) #125,721 in Literature & Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (508) |
| Dimensions | 7.71 x 1.5 x 5.17 inches |
| Edition | unknown |
| ISBN-10 | 0199535663 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0199535668 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 848 pages |
| Publication date | May 15, 2008 |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Reading age | 13 years and up |
J**L
The Good Soldier Schweik of antiquity
A grand overarching story embellished with a thousand of pithy anecdotes of varying relevance. It is possible to make big fuss about whether the anecdotes are literally true (in the Schweik case, there were many people wasting the time of their lives really trying to map the anecdotes to real individuals and events) but in the end, it does not matter that much. And as a matter of fact, whatever in this book is possible to confirm one way or another was actually confirmed. You owe it to yourself to read it, it must rate among the 20 most important and at the same time most entertaining books ever written. The translation is lucid, and there are many helpful remarks.
M**H
History for knowledge
Herodotus is quite the ancient historian; he's full of himself and funny too.
B**R
Engrossing, educational, complicated and confusing
You get out of it for the reason you decided to pick it up. I'm a casual reader but picked it up when it was referenced in something else. To me it read like great historical fiction, although theres lots of confusion because there are so many names and places and frequent digressions and his maps, particularly the ones of Greece, are terrible. I spent a fair amount of time on Google but it was well worth it. The notes are helpful if you read them by chapter and I got more out of the introduction after reading the first 2 books because it made more sense Its also a scholarly work, as well which makes it a more difficult read because you cant read it without lots of reference material or are already literate in the subject. One thing I will say is that it should be required reading for would-be journalists. He makes it clear when he uses multiple sources or doesn't and whether or not he trusts the sources.
A**8
A necessary part of the education of modern students.
Herodotus was an excellent historian, reporting only what he saw or was told by the knowledgeable people he spoke with in the countries he visited. Many of his reports were discounted as being contrary to popular beliefs, but are now being shown to be more accurate than first thought, based on modern discoveries.
R**R
Recent translation
Very readable translation.
J**H
Quite surprising
This is a ~2500 year old book on history that was criticized right after it came out. It's often viewed as the less serious, less academic, inferior work when compared to Thucydides - the author who provided the template for future historians. For that reason, a modern reader may hesitate to look at it. They should not. It is a wonderful read - the stories are great, the sociological descriptions are wonderful, the deductive analysis (when placed into context) is remarkable. The book's engagement with real world events must be considered, and there are excellent footnotes to discuss it. Ultimately, this is the best and often only source for many of his subjects. As such it is well worth reading and engaging with. Afterwards you will probably spot many, many references to this book through the centuries. The Histories is critical to our modern day understanding of the classical world. I do think that reading it with a map of the ancient world would be helpful if you're not familiar with the landscape, but other than that, just go along with it.
S**E
very good translation
This translation reads very well, makes for an exciting and enjoyable read; if you like a good story you'll find more than enough of them here. Also comparisons of the Greek vs. the Persian version of the story of the conflict between East and West. Ethnographic sections about Egypt, Persia, and all sorts of places East of Greece: Lydians, Medes, Phoenicians, Bactrians, etc. Very long, but its the kind of book you can enjoy reading just a part of, then come back if you like after 3 months (or three years) to read some more. Binding seems good.
J**H
Herodotus the Humorous
I am only through book one but I love it. The father of history, the original historian and yet so much is lost since him. Herodotus brings a humorous light hearted touch to history that so many don't. And his topics are so ranging in lesson. I wonder if it is in his book one the first time it was taught to not mess with those who prepare your food. History is collected by historians for all of humanity, yet it seems that it is only the historians who take the time to read the resulting histories. I highly encourage anyone abd everyone to read the histories of Herodotus. You'll thank me later.
C**N
Robin Waterfield provides an excellent translation accompanied by good preface and useful notes. The only drawback is the small maps due to the Kindle format but they have been worse elsewhere. For me the Kindle was a natural choice as Oxford Classics series come with ridiculous small print that is a challenge to my eyes. Highly recommend.
A**R
Had to return it due to water damage(not the sellers fault just bad luck with weather) but really liked the book. Its small has good font the paper quality could be better but a definite yes for 550 rupees. However it did take 3 weeks to arive. Will definitely purchased it again once the price drops.
M**R
The Histories is Herodotus' account of how Persia came to control Asia and how poor and fractious Greek states repelled the invasion of a massive army and navy comprising all the people under Persian domination, including Phoenician sailors and spear-wielding Ethiopians in leopard skins. Herodotus reports stories that he has picked up on travels around the Mediterranean about historical events of the 7th and 6th centuries BCE, and about social mores among the people involved. The sources are rarely identified, and Herodotus himself is less than certain about the credibility of some of the tales. There's probably as much myth as there is history in this book, but the translator's notes are very helpful at separating the wheat from the chaff for the reader who wants to know (I'm referring to the Oxford World's Classics edition translated by Robin Waterfield, just in case Amazon posts this review on every other edition, as it is wont to do). For a history of the period, there are probably much better books to read than this one. What's exciting about The Histories is the feeling of hearing the account of events as it was told in Plato's Athens. Here are the stories that were shared in antiquity about the bravery of the Spartans at Thermopylae, the wiliness of Themistocles, the fearsome habits of the Cannibals, and the hubris of Xerxes, to mention just a few. Regardless of their truth, the stories are hugely entertaining, such as the one about the renegade Egyptian commander whose only response to the messenger come to deliver an ultimatum from the Pharoah was to raise himself on his saddle and fart, or the better known story about the lashing of the Hellespont ordered by the Persian emperor Xerxes for not remaining calm during his army's passage. If nothing else, they confirm that malicious gossip is not a modern invention.
G**V
Einfach alles prima. Gutes Qualität, schnelle Lieferung. Die Erklärung hinten ist sehr wichtig und nötig. Bin Historiker.
Y**I
One of the classic books written by “the father of history”
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