This book is essential reading before watching the new Odyssey film
Homer still matters, argues Adam Nicolson in The Mighty Dead, a great primer to Christopher Nolan's new adaptation of the Odyssey, says Kelsey Hayes
Homer still matters, argues Adam Nicolson in The Mighty Dead, a great primer to Christopher Nolan's new adaptation of the Odyssey, says Kelsey Hayes
Read Full Story at New Scientist โWhy This Matters
The enduring relevance of Homerโs *Odyssey*โa 3,000-year-old epicโlies in its unflinching portrayal of human resilience against chaos, a theme that resonates deeply in an era of global uncertainty. Adam Nicolsonโs *The Mighty Dead* doesnโt just revisit the text; it excavates the ancient worldโs emotional and cultural DNA, offering a lens to decode modern storytellingโs most enduring tropes. Whether Nolanโs film adapts the myth faithfully or reimagines it, the conversation it sparks about legacy, survival, and the search for home will shape how we consume epic narratives today.
Background Context
Homerโs works emerged in the Greek Dark Ages, a period marked by oral tradition, oral composition, and the collapse of centralized powerโmaking the *Odyssey*โs themes of wanderers and warlords eerily prescient. The epicโs later canonization as foundational literature occurred during Athensโ golden age, when its ideals of heroism and cunning were weaponized in political rhetoric. Nicolsonโs work aligns with a modern scholarly shift: recognizing that myths arenโt just ancient bedtime stories but blueprints for understanding power, identity, and human nature across time.
What Happens Next
Nolanโs film will likely polarize audiences between purists and innovators, with the latter pushing for bold reinterpretations of Odysseusโ morality and the role of women like Athena and Penelope. The commercial success of such adaptations could embolden studios to revisit other classical works, framing them as "timeless" while risking the flattening of their cultural depth. Meanwhile, Nicolsonโs book may spark renewed academic and public debates about the ethics of myth-making in modern media.
Bigger Picture
The resurgence of ancient epics in pop culture reflects a broader hunger for narratives that grapple with foundational questionsโidentity, fate, and the cost of ambitionโamid todayโs fragmented world. This trend mirrors the 19th-century Romantic fascination with Greece, but with a digital twist: algorithms and fan cultures now co-author these myths, remixing them into viral fragments. In this light, *The Mighty Dead* and Nolanโs *Odyssey* arenโt just artistic choices; theyโre cultural

