The Story Across Time - Alizarin Capeland
In Somewhere I Have Never Traveled, it describes three stories in which the Hero's Journey is applicable. Despite being from three different cultures and times, the stories have the same basic structures. For Homer's Odyssey and Iliad, each hero finds their own purpose for living through their journeys. In the Iliad, this is Achilles as he goes through the Trojan War and meets his own tragic end but ultimately wins the war. The next book, The Odyssey, follows Odysseus as he faces trials when returning home and learns the value of humility and family. Inspired by Homer's stories, Virgil wrote The Aeneid as a founding story of Rome. The parallel storyline makes sense despite being written hundreds of years later and cements the value of the circular path a hero takes. Aeneas, like Odysseus, must find a new home after Troy was destroyed, forcing him to learn the lesson of hard work and humility. Although written much earlier, the Epic of Gilgamesh also follows this same path. The main character must face his own death and learn the importance of life and learning. Despite being from such different origins, these stories portray the hero's journey in its entirety.
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