Edith Hamilton
The Greek Way
"Five hundred years before Christ in a little town on the far western border of the
settled and civilizaed world, a strange new power was at work. . . . Athens had
entered upon her brief and magnificent flowering of genius which so molded the
world of mind and of spirit that our mind and spirit today are different. . . .
What was then produced of art and of thought has never been surpasses and very rarely
equalled, and the stamp of it is upon all the art and all the thought of the Western
world."
A perennial favorite in many different editions, Edith Hamilton's best-selling
The Greek Way captures the spirit and achievements of Greece in the fifth
century B.C. A retired headmistress when she began her writing career in the 1930s,
Hamilton immediately demonstrated a remarkable ability to bring the world of ancient
Greece to life, introducing that world to the twentieth century. The New
York Times called The Greek Way a "book of both cultural and critical
importance."
Edith Hamilton won the National Achievement Award in 1950, received honorary
degrees of Doctor of Letters from Yale University, the University of Rochester,
and the University of Pennsylvania, and was a member of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters. In 1957 she was many an honorary citizen of Athens and was
decorated with the Golden Cross of the Order of Benefaction by King Paul of Greece.
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