Episodes
IN WHICH: We explore the lineage of King Alcinous, Odysseus's host, tracing his family line back to the notorious and ill-fated race of Giants.
Published 01/22/24
Published 01/22/24
IN WHICH: We return from an unexpected hiatus with a "party piece" - a performance of an excerpt from Alexander Pope's 1726 verse translation of The Odyssey, Book V.
Published 12/21/23
IN WHICH:  Odysseus is rescued by a young princess engaged in pursuits of domestic management. Athena returns him to a state of manly elegance, and the princess promises him a speedy return to his homeland on a magical ship.
Published 09/21/23
IN WHICH: Odysseus uses guile and deceit to attain The Bow of Heracles from Philoctetes, the man he betrayed and abandoned ten years before. Watch a video of "The Speckled Bull" - an Irish folktale descended from the myth of Heracles and Achelous HERE. See artwork related to this episode HERE.   Email Tom Lee HERE
Published 07/13/23
IN WHICH: We recount the Roman story of the Achilleid, detailing how the immortal nymph Thetis tried to protect her all-too-mortal son Achilles from the perils of the Trojan War and how "wily Odysseus" contrived to foil her schemes. SEE ARTWORK RELATED TO THIS EPISODE HERE. E-MAIL TOM LEE HERE.
Published 06/15/23
IN WHICH we explore the most repeated poetic line in all of the Odyssey and learn the tragic story of Eos, goddess of the dawn, who kindled the wrath of Aphrodite and was cursed ever after to a life of unrequited lust.  Ouch. Also, we delve into the misty past of the great citadel of Troy and learn how gods helped to create it, and to (almost) destroy it. Notes, images and music for this episode can be FOUND HERE. E-mail Tom Lee HERE
Published 04/20/23
IN WHICH we encounter our hero, Odysseus, as the coddled prisoner of the sea  nymph Calypso in her  island hermitage.  Hermes, the reluctant ambassador of Zeus, liberates the captive, who flees directly into the path of a wrathful Poseidon. Images and music referenced in this episode can be explored HERE. E-mail Tom Lee HERE.
Published 04/06/23
IN WHICH: We delve into what may be the least understood episode of the Trojan War: that horse.  How could the Trojans be so foolish as to bring that horse into their city?  Homer doesn't have much to say about it, but Vergil tells you how.... Footnotes and images for this episode are available here. Email Tom Lee here.
Published 03/23/23
IN WHICH we considered what married life is like when a husband and wife are reunited after a ten-year long war waged over the wife's infidelity.  Menelaus and Helen both remember their encounters with Odysseus, and we learn how the sea god Proteus can be tricked into telling all he knows. See notes and images for this episode HERE
Published 03/16/23
IN WHICH: We delve into the birth of Helen of Sparta, I mean Troy, one of the countless children of Zeus whose lives intersect in The Iliad and The Odyssey. Footnotes to the show are available here. EMAIL TOM LEE
Published 03/09/23
IN WHICH: Telemachus and Mentor/Athena visit Old King Nestor in search of news of Odysseus.  Nestor relates the chaotic departure of the Greeks from Troy after "Lesser" Ajax angered Athena. Program notes available here. Instagram page here
Published 03/02/23
Homer and a Pterodactyl walk into this bar...
Published 02/27/23
Life on a small island. Telemachus obeys Athena's command to call an assembly on Ithaca - the first since his father departed nineteen years ago. Athena intervenes in a series of disguises.
Published 02/16/23
When plotting  revenge, they say you should dig two graves: one for your victim, and one for yourself.   In this episode, the curse of the House of Atreus is fulfilled in a rather horrifying "dinner for one."  We encounter a future king and his future murderer.
Published 02/09/23
A throwback to one of the foundational myths of Ancient Greece and the origins of the Trojan War.  A prequel to "The Odyssey," of sorts. For more information about art, music and literature referenced in this episode, please see MY WEBSITE. If you have thoughts, questions, or better ideas, please E-MAIL ME.
Published 02/02/23
While Zeus considers who is to blame for the suffering of mortals, Athena sets the action of the epic in motion, taking on the first of her many disguises and inspiring Odysseus's son, Telemachus.
Published 01/26/23
It's not just Poseidon who rules the sea.  We explore the many gods of the ocean realm, their parents, their children, and what makes them angry. More information and images on my WEBPAGE. I would love tyo your your thoughts, questions, or better ideas.  EMAIL
Published 01/19/23
Published 01/12/23
Published 01/07/23