Quote:
Originally posted by Melusine:
Then, just read the story of Odysseus... read it a few times, and you'll get engrossed in it and there will be no need to force it into your head since it's always easy to re-tell a story by heart if you like it.
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ooooh, could be pretty tricky to read
The Odyssey a few times over in a short timespan [img]tongue.gif[/img] Took me long enough just to read it once [img]smile.gif[/img] But then, I'm not the brightest spark in the campfire
Alot of the sites posted in this thread seem pretty decent. And
Aelia Jusa's metamorphoses link looks especially good. You've really gotta use as many primary sources (ie: 'raw' information that hasn't been subject to other people's interpretation such as original texts and scripts, archaeological findings etc.) as you can when doing a report on Ancient Myth [img]graemlins/thumbsup.gif[/img] Although if this is for high school then you could probably get away with alot of the secondary stuff that's about (ie: Books by modern writers and scholars 'about' ancient myths), and there is ALOT of it concerning ancient Greek myth.