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Olivia Coolidge

    Olivia Coolidge è stata un'autrice di spicco nella letteratura per l'infanzia, che ha riportato in vita il passato attraverso rielaborazioni mitologiche meticolosamente ricercate. I suoi studi di latino, greco e filosofia all'Università di Oxford l'hanno dotata di una profonda conoscenza che ha permeato le sue narrazioni. La Coolidge eccelleva nella sua capacità di tradurre leggende e figure antiche in forme accessibili e avvincenti per i giovani lettori. Le sue opere sono apprezzate per il loro pregio letterario e la loro abilità nell'accendere l'immaginazione.

    Men of Athens
    Tales of the Crusades
    • Tales of the Crusades

      • 214pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      For almost four hundred years, three civilizations put an endless stream of energy and people into a great movement called the Crusades. Beautiful cities were destroyed, armies clashed and lives were lost. It accomplished nothing. The goal had been the ideal of a pope: to capture Jerusalem and establish a new Christendom. But motives became corrupted and confused and the original ideal was lost, and in the end, the people were left disillusioned. Nevertheless, countless thousands joined, and continued to join, the Crusades for reasons ranging from faith to folly. From Little Peter and the First Crusade in 1075 to those who followed Pope Pius II in 1464, there are emperors, knights, thieves and paupers, all with a dream and a unique purpose in mind. Olivia Coolidge has created an entertaining and often ironic collection of stories of the harrowing triumph and ultimate tragedy of the Crusades in which she successfully avoids taking sides or moralizing, leaving the reader to draw his own conclusions. Recommended for high school.

      Tales of the Crusades
    • Men of Athens

      • 218pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      In these short stories, Olivia Coolidge puts flesh and blood on the history of the Golden Age of Athens-a highly colored panorama of the times and men who made the glory of Athens Golden Age. Here is the barbaric splendor of the Persian court of Sardis; a stirring view of the battle of Salamis; here is Themistocles, the ambassador from Athens, cleverly outmaneuvering the smug and simple Spartans; Criton, the athlete, defending the honor of his city at the Olympic games; the battle of the marketplace where even a potter strives for an excellence worthy of his city. Finally after the flashing brilliance of Athens at its height of power, there is a moving account of the day that Socrates is condemned to death, a verdict that seems to spell the death of Athens itself. A true visit to the world of the Athenian century!

      Men of Athens