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The World's Desire
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More by Andrew Lang
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A clearer way to understand The World's Desire through themes, characters, and key ideas
This reading guide highlights what stands out in The World's Desire through 5 core themes, 2 character profiles. It is meant to help readers decide whether the book fits their taste and deepen the reading once they begin.
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What the book is doing
H. Rider Haggard and Andrew Lang's "The World's Desire" reimagines the epic journey of Odysseus, casting him into a new quest for the elusive ideal of beauty, personified by Helen of Troy. Returning to a desolate and abandoned Ithaca, Odysseus grapples with profound loss and the wreckage of his past life. A mystical vision of Helen, however, reignites his spirit, compelling him to embark on a perilous adventure steeped in Greco-Egyptian mythology and driven by an insatiable longing. The novel explores themes of desire, desolation, fate, and the supernatural, presenting a hero in search of an ultimate, perhaps unattainable, ideal.
Key Themes
The Pursuit of Ideal Beauty/Desire
Central to the novel, this theme explores the human yearning for an ultimate, often elusive, ideal. Helen of Troy embodies this ideal beauty, acting as the catalyst for Odysseus's quest. It delves into whether such a pursuit brings fulfillment or leads to endless longing.
Loss and Desolation
The novel opens with Odysseus confronting the utter destruction and abandonment of his homeland, Ithaca. This theme explores the profound psychological impact of losing everything familiar and cherished, and how an individual grapples with a past that is irrevocably gone.
“The silence of Ithaca was a shroud, a testament to a life unlived, a kingdom unmade.”
How does the novel's reinterpretation of Odysseus's character and quest challenge or complement traditional portrayals of the hero?
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