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Hardcover Gilgamesh the Hero Book

ISBN: 0802852629

ISBN13: 9780802852625

Gilgamesh the Hero

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

$12.69
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Book Overview

This is one of the oldest stories in the world, and it's about things that still matter to us today: friendship, fame, courage, happiness.

Gilgamesh and Enkidu are friends -- best friends. Together they can work wonders, fight monsters, brave earthquakes, travel the world But waiting in the dark is the one enemy they can never overcome.

Retold by award-winning author Geraldine McCaughrean, and illustrated with great power by David Parkins,...

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Not appropriate for children

Not appropriate material for 15 and younger in my opinion. Page is 13 and 14 show a picture of a naked woman from behind and talks about how she seduced the man and was naked, and hurled herself at him, and then they made out.

delightful version of one of my favorite tales

I had read John Gardner's version previously and highly recommend it as a more complete translation. McCaughrean has not included every adventure of Gilgamesh and Enkidu, but has rendered a beautiful version to introduce readers to Gilgamesh and his BFF Enkidu. His trip to the Underworld is left out. She only makes a passing reference to his being 2/3 god and 1/3 man, my favorite Gilgamesh trait. The language is beautiful. I found passages so beautifully expressed that I had to read them out loud to my household. The illustrations add to the book. On the pages with the description of The Great Flood, the waves of the water are under the text. The image of Gilgamesh in grief is as strong an illustration of grief as one can find anywhere. The book only took a couple of hours to read, but it lingers, like the memory of a gourmet meal, deeply satisfying. I will look for additional books by Geraldine McCaughrean. That has to be the ultimate "good review" of an author.

inspiring

My class was studying Mesopotamia, 3rd grade by the way, and we needed a reading group book. This was the obvious choice. In the end we had at least five versions of Gilgamesh. None compared to this. We loved it. We had as many lessons on writing style as on the book's content. The writing is eloquent/poetic. It's not dumbed down at all. My students' parents said they liked this version better than the one you're forced to read in highschool. We had discussions on the book's themes: friendship, heroism, quality of life and immortality. We tried to decide if Gilgamesh was a tragic hero. These discussions just flowed. They weren't in my lesson plans. We discussed metaphors, similies, repetition and rhyme, all of which are used with such brilliant style, we cried and laughed and debated and we were late for lunch each day, reading this book. Students began to compare Gilgamesh to Hercules and even MACBETH (as last year we read the Shakespeare for kids series, during our Renasissance study.) They are still quoting this book, i.e. "Never to have met Gilgamesh, that would have been never to have lived at all." It was full of everything good writers do, superb foreshadowing and we even wrote character analysis and essays on friendship, etc. We loved it so much , we made a webpage. Check out [...] I put stickers over the singing lady's butt, but I can't recommend this book highly enough, especially for children aged 10-12. I purchased 25 copies! Ms. Waller , Montclair, N.J./Edgemont Montessori School

Gilgamesh shines through

I am grateful to Ms. McCaughrean for her distillation of this story. I have been reading various translations and a couple of retellings of the Gilgamesh story for the past thirty years or so, always enjoying the story but always with a sense that I was missing something. Finally, with this retelling I "get it." The elements of the story finally fall into place. Excellent.

A beautiful retelling of the Epic of Gilgamesh for students

We believe Gilgamesh was a historical king of Uruk in Babylonia, on the River Eurphrates in what is now Iraq, who lives around 2700 B.C.E. "The Epic of Gilgamesh" is the oldest recorded story in the world, having been originally carved on twelve stone tablets, which have broken apart in the past four thousand years. These twelve tablets, written in the Akkadian language by an author named Shin-eqi-unninni, were found in the ruins of the library of Ashurbanipal, king of Assyria (668-627 B.C.E.) at Nineveh (the library was destroyed by the Persians). In "Gilgamesh the Hero," Geraldine McCaughrean creates a free adaptation from a variety of translations of those tablets. Each chapter reflects what is found on one of the twelve tablets (the order of which is still open to interpretation). Young readers will learn over how Gilgaemsh, the hero who saw all, became friends with Enkidu the wild man, slays the Bull of Heaven, survived the Great Flood, and seeks the secret of immortality. The chief narrative thread is the friendship of Gilgamesh and Enkidu, and how the latter's death teaches Gilgamesh to be a kinder, better ruler who "walked through darkness and so glimpsed the light." McCaughrean is able to have it both ways with her retelling of these ancient myths. She maintains the classic nature of the epic while telling the story in a way that makes the ancient story accessible to young readers in today's world. The illustrations by David Parkins are in this same mode, complementing the stories nicely. In retelling the story, McCaughrean makes the friendship between Gilgamesh and Enkidu the backbone of the story, as it should be, While the classical mythology of the Greeks and Romans continues to attract the most attention, "Gilgamesh the Hero" makes the necessary argument for remembering these ancient stories as well. Asking young students to compare and contrast the epic of Gilgamesh with the Twelve Labors of Hercules or Jason and the Quest for the Golden Fleece would certainly be a worthwhile classroom activity for a unit on myth. Comparative mythology is becoming the approach taken in classrooms more often today, and "Gilgaemsh the Hero" reminds us that we can look backwards from Greek mythology as well as forward to find stories from other cultures to learn about.

Wonderful Introduction to An Ancient Story

This is a beautifully written version (with illustrations that really capture the ancient ambience of the story) of the oldest written story in the world. It deals with the themes common to all great literature (friendship, mortality, aspirations, love) in a way that makes sense to young people. The struggles and achievements of Gilgamesh, an ancient Sumerian king, illustrate the enduring concerns of mankind over time and lend perspective to man's search for meaning today. This is also a wonderful read-aloud book that would make a great introduction to a unit on philosophy, comparative religion or humanities for the home-schooling parent. My children (11 and 12) loved this book as much as I did.
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