Having read other reviews of Fagles’ work, I was prepared to be overwhelmed when I listened to the tapes and read the book, but I was not. Although it is true that Fitzgerald’s translation at times adds things or omits them, I found it more suitable to my literary taste, but I am the first to admit that this is really a matter of individual preference. Using any of these translations, every psychiatrist should be quite familiar with The Odyssey, a book dealing with existential issues that portrays the onset of the age of exploration and human self-reliance and, perhaps, the beginnings of humanism. The poetry is magnificent, and the character of Odysseus, who in Greek is repeatedly referred to as a man of many turns and twists, that is, many clever tricks or wiles, is truly heroic.