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Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea

Page 29

by Thomas Cahill


  Acclaim for Thomas Cahill’s

  SAILING THE WINE-DARK SEA

  “Readable, engaging.… Like Robert Massie, Simon Schama and the late Barbara Tuchman, Cahill gives popular history a good name.”

  —Houston Chronicle

  “Fascinating.… This book is liable to endure for 20 years.”

  —Los Angeles Times

  “Sophisticated, gracefully written.… Skillfully combines history and carefully chosen excerpts from the works of Homer, Plato, Sappho, Pericles and others with insightful commentary.… Cahill’s enthusiasm for the subject is contagious.… Satisfying and enjoyable.”

  —BookPage

  “Graceful and eloquent.”

  —San Antonio Express-News

  “The sum total reads like a lecture by a beloved college professor who’s passionate about his subject and who also has a great sense of humor.”

  —Chicago Reader

  “Captivating.… Vibrant.… Cahill’s new book has … a brilliant sketch of the evolution of Dionysus, an intriguing portrait of Socrates, and a number of shrewd and startling insights into the relationship between Christianity and the Greeks.”

  —The Charlotte Observer

  “Lively, accessible, entertaining.”

  —Boulder Daily Camera

  “Majestic … [an] elegant introduction to Greek life and thought.… Once again, Cahill gracefully opens up a world.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  “His lively narrative … synthesize[s] history, sociology and religion in entertaining and accessible fashion.”

  —Orlando Sentinel

  “Insightful and interesting.”

  —Albuquerque Journal

  “Full of fascinating folks and events.… History is being served well.”

  —Santa Fe New Mexican

  The Hinges of History

  We normally think of history as one catastrophe after another, war followed by war, outrage by outrage—almost as if history were nothing more than all the narratives of human pain, assembled in sequence. And surely this is, often enough, an adequate description. But history is also the narratives of grace, the recountings of those blessed and inexplicable moments when someone did something for someone else, saved a life, bestowed a gift, gave something beyond what was required by circumstance.

  In this series, THE HINGES OF HISTORY, I mean to retell the story of the Western world as the story of the great gift-givers, those who entrusted to our keeping one or another of the singular treasures that make up the patrimony of the West. This is also the story of the evolution of Western sensibility, a narration of how we became the people we are and why we think and feel the way we do. And it is, finally, a recounting of those essential moments when everything was at stake, when the mighty stream that became Western history was in ultimate danger and might have divided into a hundred useless tributaries or frozen in death or evaporated altogether. But the great gift-givers, arriving in the moment of crisis, provided for transition, for transformation, and even for transfiguration, leaving us a world more varied and complex, more awesome and delightful, more beautiful and strong than the one they had found.

  —Thomas Cahill

  The Hinges of History

  VOLUME I

  HOW THE IRISH SAVED CIVILIZATION

  THE UNTOLD STORY OF IRELAND’S HEROIC ROLE FROM THE FALL OF ROME TO THE RISE OF MEDIEVAL EUROPE

  This introductory volume presents the reader with a new way of looking at history. Its time period—the end of the classical period and the beginning of the medieval period—enables us to look back to our ancient roots and forward to the making of the modern world.

  VOLUME II

  THE GIFTS OF THE JEWS

  HOW A TRIBE OF DESERT NOMADS CHANGED THE WAY EVERYONE THINKS AND FEELS

  This is the first of three volumes on the creation of the Western world in ancient times. It is first because its subject matter takes us back to the earliest blossoming of Western sensibility, there being no West before the Jews.

  VOLUME III

  DESIRE OF THE EVERLASTING HILLS

  THE WORLD BEFORE AND AFTER JESUS

  This volume, which takes as its subject Jesus and the first Christians, comes directly after The Gifts of the Jews, because Christianity grows directly out of the unique culture of ancient Judaism.

  VOLUME IV

  SAILING THE WINE-DARK SEA

  WHY THE GREEKS MATTER

  The Greek contribution to our Western heritage comes to us largely through the cultural conduit of the Romans (who, though they do not have a volume of their own, are a presence in Volumes I, III, IV, and V). The Greek contribution, older than Christianity, nevertheless continues past the time of Jesus and his early followers and brings us to the medieval period. Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea concludes our study of the making of the ancient world.

  VOLUME V

  MYSTERIES OF THE MIDDLE AGES

  AND THE BEGINNING OF THE MODERN WORLD

  The high Middle Ages are the first iteration of the combined sources of Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman cultures that make Western civilization singular. In the fruitful interaction of these sources, science and realistic art are rediscovered and feminism makes its first appearance in human history.

  VOLUMES VI AND VII

  These volumes will continue and conclude our investigation of the making of the modern world and the impact of its cultural innovations on the sensibility of the West.

  By Thomas Cahill

  THE HINGES OF HISTORY

  INTRODUCTORY VOLUME:

  How the Irish Saved Civilization

  THE MAKING OF THE ANCIENT WORLD:

  The Gifts of the Jews

  Desire of the Everlasting Hills

  Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea

  THE MAKING OF THE MODERN WORLD:

  Mysteries of the Middle Ages

  Two additional volumes are planned on the making of the modern world.

  Also by Thomas Cahill

  A Literary Guide to Ireland (with Susan Cahill)

  Jesus’ Little Instruction Book

  Pope John XXIII

  A Saint on Death Row (forthcoming)

 

 

 


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