Beowulf (Signet Classics)
 

Beowulf

by Anonymous

The epic poem of war and adventure.

Beowulf is the earliest extant poem in a modern European language. It was composed in England four centuries before the Norman Conquest. But no one knows exactly when it was composed, or by whom, or why. As a social document this great epic reflects a feudal, newly Christian world of heroes and monsters, blood and victory and death.

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Top tags: poetryclassicliteraturefictionepic (all tags)

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Other Reviews

Amazon Reviews (5)
 

Most Helpful Reviews

Liked It

98 Degrees
  • Rated 5 stars

I read Beowulf,and saw the movie with angelina jolie, and enjoyed both, the movie, and the book. great classical. a must read.

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Didn’t Like It

1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
Andrea B
  • Rated 1 stars

I had to read this for high school English Literature. I like classics, but this was terrible! My worksheets made it worse, asking detailed questions about something written in an obscure form of English. I did not enjoy it, to say the least.

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Community:
  • Rated 3.61164 stars
Amazon:
  • Rated 4.405406 stars
 

Newest Comments

  • NQW

    nqw said:

    I first read this translation between the 2000 election and the Bush vs. Gore decision. Beuwulf's proto Anglo-Saxon motivations rooted in wrongs done to his father turned out to be an interesting predictor of the GW Bush administration. Whenever I wonder what W will do about some issue, I just think what would Beowulf do? Scary, but it always works.

    posted Monday, June 30 2008
  • Shoshi2

    shoshi2 said:

    beuwulf -reminds me on that classic ballade i had to read and get the components down at high school. The nordic tale about that 'man eating monster' Grendel, and the warrior who fought it down to its wet cave and cought it.

    posted Friday, October 19 2007
  • rgoutham

    rgoutham said:

    Checkout Crichton's 'Eaters of the Dead' , the book was inspired by Beowulf...

    posted Tuesday, July 31 2007
  • EmilyRuth78

    emilyruth78 said:

    Heaney's translation is wonderfully accessible, while maintaining many of the features of the Old English poem.

    posted Thursday, July 12 2007
  • littlelegs

    littlelegs said:

    Sorry to repeat the views of the others but the Heaney translation is brilliant and so accessible.

    I went out with Grendel then I met her mother......

    posted Wednesday, June 6 2007
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