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Gilgamesh: A New English Version [BARGAIN PRICE] (Paperback)

by Stephen Mitchell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (83 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
The acclaimed translator of the Tao Te Ching and the Bhagavad Gita now takes on the oldest book in the world. Inscribed on stone tablets a thousand years before the Iliad and the Bible and found in fragments, Gilgamesh describes the journey of the king of the city of Uruk in what is now Iraq.At the start, Gilgamesh is a young giant with gigantic wealth, power and beauty—and a boundless arrogance that leads him to oppress his people. As an answer to their pleas, the gods create Enkidu to be a double for Gilgamesh, a second self. Learning of this huge, wild man who runs with the animals, Gilgamesh dispatches a priestess to find him and tame him by seducing him. Making love with the priestess awakens Enkidu's consciousness of his true identity as a human being rather than as an animal. Enkidu is taken to the city and to Gilgamesh, who falls in love with him as a soul mate. Soon, however, Gilgamesh takes his beloved friend with him to the Cedar Forest to kill the guardian, the monster Humbaba, in defiance of the gods. Enkidu dies as a result. The overwhelming grief and fear of death that Gilgamesh suffers propels him on a quest for immortality that is as fast-paced and thrilling as a contemporary action film. In the end, Gilgamesh returns to his city. He does not become immortal in the way he thinks he wants to be, but he is able to embrace what is.Relying on existing translations (and in places where there are gaps, on his own imagination), Mitchell seeks language that is as swift and strong as the story itself. He conveys the evenhanded generosity of the original poet, who is as sympathetic toward women and monsters—and the whole range of human emotions and desires—as he is toward his heroes. This wonderful new version of the story of Gilgamesh shows how the story came to achieve literary immortality—not because it is a rare ancient artifact, but because reading it can make people in the here and now feel more completely alive.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From The Washington Post
It's the world's first epic poem but was the last to be found. Inscribed on stone tablets in the Akkadian language, the epic Gilgamesh was buried during the fall of Nineveh, its language forgotten, not to be recovered and deciphered until the 19th century. In the excellent introduction to his new version, Stephen Mitchell tells the story of one of the epic's first translators, who was so excited when he realized that part of Gilgamesh anticipated the story of Noah's flood that he began running around the room and stripping off his clothes, shocking his Victorian colleagues. Since then, it has been translated many times, but most of the translations are intended for scholars and students. Mitchell, an American translator, and Derrek Hines, a British poet, independently decided it was time for a new version of the poem for the general reader, and both remind us why this 4000-year-old poem deserves to stand with other classic epics.

I would love to claim this as the world's first novel, for it's nearly long enough and dramatizes the central concern of the novel: "The Gilgamesh Epic is a story about growing up," as a commentator once said, about moving from a state of innocence to one of experience and accepting the way things really are. It certainly has a novel's worth of action: Young King Gilgamesh of Uruk (modern-day Warka, in Iraq) is a royal hellraiser, mistreating his subjects so badly that they complain to the gods, who oblige by creating a wild man named Enkidu as a worthy rival and distraction. He and Gilgamesh become fast friends after a wrestling match -- this is a very macho work, despite the presence of several strong female characters -- and Enkidu's eventual death hits Gilgamesh hard. Wishing to avoid his own death, he goes in quest of the secret of immortality but fails in his attempt. Realizing that all his efforts have been in vain, Gilgamesh resigns himself to the inevitability of death and comes to see that the only true immortality is for work that endures: the walls of Uruk he has erected, or a work of art like Gilgamesh.

Various portions of the epic were composed in the late third millennium B.C.E., then consolidated in the mid-second millennium by the scribe and incantation-priest Sîn-lëqi-unninni, whose version is the basis for most translations. Even that version is incomplete, however, so most translators have borrowed segments from earlier versions to make the narrative as coherent as possible. Mitchell has read all the English translations -- he admits he doesn't know Akkadian -- and has produced a very readable version in stately verse, printed in a beautiful format. Given the incomplete condition of the original, he has not hesitated to fill in some gaps, clarify images, delete repetitions and isolated fragments, and sometimes move lines around (all dutifully noted in his 80 pages of informative notes).

Scholars and purists will object to these liberties; Mitchell is writing not for them but for the general reader who has always meant to read Gilgamesh but has been put off by the scholarly translations. As such, his version can be warmly recommended. He retains just enough of the strangeness of the original and its robust imagery to capture its essence, and by smoothing the fragments into a coherent narrative he highlights the work's essential themes: the necessary but painful progression from innocence to experience, the joys and sorrows of friendship, and the realization that personal fulfillment comes not in some mythical afterlife but here on Earth. As a wise woman tells our hero: "Humans are born, they live, then they die,/ this is the order that the gods have decreed./ But until the end comes, enjoy your life,/ spend it in happiness, not despair./ Savor your food, make each of your days/ a delight, bathe and anoint yourself,/ wear bright clothes that are sparkling clean, let music and dancing fill your house,/ love the child who holds you by the hand,/ and give your wife pleasure in your embrace./ That is the best way for a man to live."

If Mitchell's Gilgamesh is intended for the beginner, Derrek Hines's version is for those who know the poem already and can delight in his postmodern makeover. Like Christopher Logue's startling adaptations of The Iliad, this version sounds like a rock band attacking a Bach concerto, with jarring but thrilling results. Here, for example, is how Hines describes the entrance of the Akkadian sex goddess:

The incoming, high-velocity blip on the radar screen
flips onto the sky, and cracks the sound barrier.
Before him a Manhattan-high wall of glass air
shatters, and reglazes behind
a woman.

For a moment blue's brakes fail:

everything stammers sapphire
until her eyes cool to human frequencies.
She is ISHTAR . . .

How cool is that? Hines obviously takes even more liberties with the original than Mitchell does, but his flamboyance and daring make this a delight to read. His version is as full of gods as Mitchell's (and Sîn-lëqi-unninni's), but secular affirmation triumphs: "For who needs the gods when you have poetry/ to exalt and redeem man in his fate -- / a liturgy without religion?"

Reviewed by Steven Moore
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

See all Editorial Reviews


Product Details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press (January 24, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743261690
  • ASIN: B00150III0
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (83 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #5,408,540 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

83 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (83 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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95 of 99 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Introduction to the Epic of Gilgamesh., October 21, 2004
By Todd Havens (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I have heard the Gilgamesh title bandied about in conversations over the years, but I never had any interest in reading the epic that carries the historical king's name until Stephen Mitchell's translation came along. Call it fate, downtime between freelance jobs or an intriguing cover that happened to feed into my backburnered fascination with the Ancient Near East. In any event, I purchased the book and have just now finished reading it.

One of my biggest obstacles in approaching ancient literature is language. I want to be able to read it in a modern-enough translation that I don't lose the rhythm of the writing. Nothing destroys my interest in finishing a book more than constantly having to flip to a rear glossary or bouncing down to incessant footnotes. Mitchell's translation avoids all of that clutter by telling the story in a vernacular that facilitates finishing the work within a single sitting.

There are ample endnotes that delve into the issue of language translation if that floats one's boat, but there is also a wonderful (and timely) introduction that sets the stage for the literary adventure that is Gilgamesh. Mitchell's love for the epic is evident in his writing style which never suffers from erudite jargon or stuffy, scholarly analysis.

I found this translation completely accessible and a great joy to read!
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37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Decent Choice To Start, August 8, 2006
In general, I am more interested in the scholarly translations of the Epic of Gilgamesh than I am those that attempt to create an English literary version of the Epic. That being said, Stephen Mitchell's new version of the Epic is a very readable adaptation, even if he takes a lot of liberties with the original story. Mr. Mitchell draws from several different translations, including Stephanie Dalley's and Benjamin Foster's, both of which I have read and can recommend to others as very good literal translations. He also uses Andrew George's "The Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic" which has been highly recommended to me, and which I look forward to reading.

In his efforts to produce a more literary version of the Epic, parts of it have been cut or rearranged, so if you are looking for a pure translation, this is not only not a good choice but it would be one of the worst selections you could make. However, if you are looking for an enjoyable and easy to follow version of the Epic, this is a nice introduction. I would not suggest that you read only this edition though, but rather use it as a starting place to get a feel for the story and then move on to the other translations, which while more difficult to follow are ultimately more rewarding.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You can feel the wisdom and beauty on every page, December 9, 2004
By Morgana Darling (California) - See all my reviews
I was in a wine store the other day, looking for an exquisite wine. Somehow Stephen Mitchell's name came up in the conversation. Then the wine merchant told me how his life had been deeply influenced by Mitchell's translations of Rilke. He said that the essence of Rilke's work had inhabited Mitchell's translations.

So it is no wonder that Mitchell's latest offering, his translation of the ancient epic Gilgamesh, has been chosen as the Book Sense "2004 Highlight for Poetry." Harold Bloom agrees with the wine merchant about Mitchell's ability as a translator when he writes that Mitchell's Gilgamesh "is as eloquent and nuanced as his translations of Rilke."

Mitchell is that rare talent who combines scholarship and exquisite poetic sensibility in the service of a translation. His rendering of Gilgamesh expresses the soul of this most ancient of epics in all of its lyrical splendor and primordial wisdom - so much so that you can feel the beauty and the wisdom on every page.

Mitchell informs us in his introduction that Rilke wrote: "Gilgamesh is stupendous. I consider it to be one of the greatest things that could happen to a person." So when you have a work with such ancient and innate power as Gilgamesh, we are doubly fortunate when someone such as Mitchell gives us the gift of his translation. His scholarship and poetic eloquence resonate in harmony together to capture the essence of the work.

Mitchell says he was possessed by the task of the translation when in reading Gilgamesh one of its lines came to him as "Climb the stone staircase, more ancient than the mind can imagine." I am reminded of how John Fowles described the inception of The French Lieutenant's Woman as an image that came to him of a woman standing alone at the end of a misty pier. The image possessed him and eventually grew into the novel. Mitchell seems to have been equally as possessed by the invitation to climb the stone staircase and translate this most ancient work.

Some have suggested that America is the modern Babylon. Even if this isn't so, Mitchell is certainly a modern Sin-leqi-unninni (the ancient Babylonian editor/poet whose version of Gilgamesh is referred to as the Standard Version). So pick up a copy of Mitchell's new standard version of Gilgamesh, and use your eyes and ears to take in the lyrical beauty and the wisdom more ancient than your mind can imagine. Be careful though; you might wind up having your life touched as deeply as did Rilke and the wine merchant.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars An excellent introduction to a classic tale.
Your take on this version of Gilgamesh will likely depend on your scholarly intimacy with earlier renditions of the text. Read more
Published 2 months ago by No one of consequence

5.0 out of 5 stars Sex, Death, Great Flood and More Surprises
First, I was shocked by how clear and direct the sexual content is of this classic piece of literature. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Charlotte Ann Hu

3.0 out of 5 stars It's okay ...
I agree with a previous reviewer from two years ago that I'm really not interested in a prose translation of Gilgamesh. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Donna Di Giacomo

4.0 out of 5 stars Gilgamesh: A New English Version
This edition is far, far superior to the other versions that are mere translations. When my 9th-grade son started reading this, after having read the first part of his assignment... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Janis Daemmrich

4.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding, readable and entertaining translation
I found this translation of Gilgamesh to be suprisingly refreshing and entertaining. The introduction was quite long and unfortunately, since this was my first reading of... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Amanda Prior

5.0 out of 5 stars epic wonder
not only the oldest, but one of the best stories ever told. gorgeous translation, and an unusual but compelling narrator. i never get tired of this production.
Published 9 months ago by suz

5.0 out of 5 stars And the Audio version is great, too.
I just finished the audio version of this wonderful book, and was transfixed, even though it was the third time I listened to it. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Benedict P. Lush

5.0 out of 5 stars Gilgamesh: A New English Translation
This book represents a very nice attempt to translate the extant Akkadian text to English poetry. It is well done, and makes good reading for those who are interested in reading... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Dr. Hoyt A. Childs Jr.

3.0 out of 5 stars Another Epic Hero
As Odysseus had his hubris, Achilles' his slave-girl issues, Aeneas his abandonment of various women, and Beowulf his greed in the end, Gilgamesh is a non-traditional hero whose... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Nicole Loew

3.0 out of 5 stars C+
There doesn't seem to be much redeeming value to what is known as the oldest story in the world. The narrative is achingly repetitive and spare. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Lauren Magnussen

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