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Key points

The front cover of a book with the title The Odyssey by Geraldine McCaughrean. The image shows the silhouette of a female figure weaving on a loom. Two ships sail across the bottom of the image.
  • The Odyssey is an by Homer, an Ancient Greek poet, which was written almost 3,000 years ago. This version is a re-telling by Geraldine McCaughrean.

  • The Odyssey is set in the world of the Ancient Greeks where the lives of gods, men and magical monsters intertwine.

  • The story follows a hero, Odysseus, the king of Ithaca, who is trying to return home to his family after fighting in the Trojan War. He uses his strength and cunning to defeat many challenges along the way.

The front cover of a book with the title The Odyssey by Geraldine McCaughrean. The image shows the silhouette of a female figure weaving on a loom. Two ships sail across the bottom of the image.
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Did you know?

An odyssey is a long, complicated journey full of adventures. It could be an actual voyage, or it could be an emotional, spiritual or intellectual journey.

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Video

Watch the video below to learn about the plot, characters and themes in The Odyssey.

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Plot

A timeline showing the thirteen key moments from The Odyssey by Geraldine McCaughrean. The first image shows the Trojan horse in Troy. The second image shows three men lying around and holding bowls in the land of the lotus-eaters. The third image shows Polyphemus the Cyclops. The fourth image shows Aeolia -  a bag containing wind. The fifth image shows a Laestrygonian giant grasping a man in one hand. Three other men stand at the giant鈥檚 feet. The sixth image shows Circe lying on a bed and waving her wand. The seventh image shows a boat sailing through the Underworld. White hands are reaching up out of the sea towards it. The eighth image shows the three Sirens. They are half bird, half woman and surrounded by musical notes. The ninth image shows the six-headed sea monster Scylla and the whirlpool Charybdis. The tenth image shows Helio鈥檚 red cows. A sun blazes in the sky overhead. The eleventh image shows Calypso standing in a cave, on a brightly-coloured rug. The twelfth image shows a boat arriving in the city of Scheria. The thirteenth image shows Penelope sat at a loom. The text reads 鈥極dysseus arrives in Ithaca鈥. The images are joined together by a blue, wavy line.

After ten years fighting in the Trojan War, Odysseus, King of Ithaca, begins the long journey home where his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus, are waiting for him.

Odysseus angers the sea god Poseidon by blinding his son, the cyclops Polyphemus, and Poseidon decides to take revenge and prevent Odysseus from reaching Ithaca. The goddess Athene decides to help Odysseus.

Odysseus begins his journey with 12 ships filled with men, but all the men and ships are lost along the way. They are either eaten by Polyphemus, Laestrygonian giants or the six-headed Scylla, or drowned in storms and the whirlpool Charybdis.

Odysseus also meets powerful, magical women on his journey, including the sorceress Circe who turns his men into pigs. She falls in love with Odysseus and he stays with her for a year before continuing his voyage home. He is also delayed by Calypso, a beautiful sea nymph who wants Odysseus to be her husband. She keeps him on her magical island for seven years before she is forced to release him by Zeus, ruler of the gods.

Odysseus eventually makes it home to Ithaca where he finds Penelope surrounded by greedy men who want to marry her. Disguised as an old beggar, Odysseus wins a contest for Penelope's hand by successfully hitting a near-impossible target with a bow and arrow. Then, with the help of his son Telemachus, he fights and kills all his rivals and reveals his true identity to Penelope.

After ten years, his odyssey is over. He makes offerings to Poseidon and peace is restored.

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Characters

The characters in The Odyssey can be split into three groups:

The silhouette of a woman sat at a loom and weaving.
Image caption,
Mortals
Three white hands reach up from the sea towards a boat.
Image caption,
Gods
Three figures that are half bird and half woman surrounded by musical notes.
Image caption,
Other beings

Mortals

Odysseus, his family, friends and soldiers are the mortals. Mortals are human characters who can die.

Gods

The Ancient Greek gods and goddesses were believed to live in a palace in the clouds above Mount Olympus. From there, they watched over the world below.

Other beings

Odysseus also meets lots of other magical beings on his journey.

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Themes

Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a novel. Some of the important themes in The Odyssey are:

  • Fate and free will
  • Heroism and resilience
  • Trickery and disguise

Fate and free will

A six-headed monster rising out of the sea and looming over a small ship.

In The Odyssey, the gods interfere with human lives and their actions directly affect Odysseus. Odysseus is delayed on his journey home because he angered the god Poseidon, and the only reason he arrives home is because the goddess Athene helps him.

Odysseus is not able to control the events around him and does not have much .

Odysseus is also given predictions about his future by Teiresias which show how he is bound to his .

A six-headed monster rising out of the sea and looming over a small ship.

What does Teiresias predict for Odysseus?

Heroism and resilience

Odysseus is an unusual hero because he makes many mistakes. For example, if he had not shouted out his name in a fit of pride after he blinded Polyphemus, Poseidon would never have known who it was that had hurt his son and wouldn鈥檛 have been able to seek revenge.

Odysseus is not a perfect leader 鈥 he makes mistakes and his men don鈥檛 always trust him. However, he is strong, clever and he refuses to give up. His means that he does return home and is reunited with his son and wife.

Trickery and disguise

The silhouette of a woman reclined on a chair and holding a wand.

Odysseus uses his intelligence to trick and outwit his enemies. For example:

  • He is able to trick Polyphemus so that he and his men can escape
  • He avoids being turned into a pig by Circe
  • He uses a disguise to enter his palace
  • He comes up with a clever plan to outwit the other men competing to marry Penelope
The silhouette of a woman reclined on a chair and holding a wand.

Which other character uses their intelligence to trick their enemies?

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Language

An image of a giant with one large eye in the centre of his forehead.

McCaughrean uses various descriptive techniques, including and , to describe the magical beings and monsters that Odysseus encounters. For example, Polyphemus is described as:

鈥 monstrous landmass of flesh and bone, whose knuckles trailed in the dirt and whose mouth was a cave in itself. In the centre of his forehead, rimmed with rheumy lashes, gaped a single massive eye.
An image of a giant with one large eye in the centre of his forehead.

What does this description tell the reader about Polyphemus?

When Odysseus' boats meet the whirlpool, Charybdis, McCaughrean uses the simile "cracked like eggs against the rocky seabed" to describe their destruction.

What does this tell us about Charybdis?

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Structure

  • The Odyssey begins with an ending 鈥 the war between Greece and Troy has ended and the Greeks have won.

  • The story is made up of a series of challenges and events that Odysseus must overcome to return home.

  • The novel is written in the . This means that, although the main story follows Odysseus and his experiences, the reader also learns about the thoughts, feelings and actions of other characters, such as Penelope, Telemachus and certain gods.

Three question marks

Did you know?

In the original Greek, The Odyssey by Homer is structured as 24 books, which here means chapters. It is written as an epic (long) poem and has a regular rhythm throughout, although not every line rhymes.

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Context

A photograph of a black vase with orange drawings on it depicting Odysseus tied up on his ship while sirens - birds with human heads - swoop above
Image caption,
This Greek vase, from around 480BC, shows Odysseus鈥 encounter with the sirens

The historical setting and time period

The Odyssey is set in the Greek islands, during the Mycenaean Bronze Age (1600BC to 1060BC). People believed that the gods watched over them and controlled the events in their lives.

This time period inspired a lot of Greek writers who saw this as a special time when people interacted with the gods, warriors were brave and heroes went on great adventures.

Many characters from The Odyssey, such as Odysseus, the Sirens and the gods, often appeared in Greek art and pottery. You can learn more about the ancient Greeks on Bitesize History.

A photograph of a black vase with orange drawings on it depicting Odysseus tied up on his ship while sirens - birds with human heads - swoop above
Image caption,
This Greek vase, from around 480BC, shows Odysseus鈥 encounter with the sirens
A stone bust of Homer, with blind eyes and a beard.
Image caption,
A Roman copy of a lost Greek bust of Homer

Who wrote The Odyssey?

Homer is the name given to the author of The Iliad and The Odyssey, two from Ancient Greece.

  • The Iliad describes the war against Troy, where the Greeks defeated the Trojans.

  • The Odyssey starts at the moment the Greeks set off home, triumphant but tired of war.

The Odyssey was composed around 700BC, but it is thought it was created out of older stories that had been remembered and recited for hundreds of years. It has been translated into many different languages and retold many times by famous writers.

A stone bust of Homer, with blind eyes and a beard.
Image caption,
A Roman copy of a lost Greek bust of Homer

What is an epic poem?

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Did you know?

Homer is usually portrayed as a blind, bearded man but in fact, experts are not sure he was just one person. The poems may actually have been written by several people.

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