

He adopts different accents and voices, and, as the Guardian review of Mythos puts it, the myths “sometimes appear to be set in North London.” (In Heroes, the sequel to Mythos, the inhabitants of Crete appear to have Scottish accents, much to my children’s delight.) In fact, after listening to Mythos one time my children (aged 12, 11 and 10) insisted on listening to it again. In short, I am writing this review halfway through my second 15 hour cycle of Mythos-listening. He tells the stories that are our Greek myths in such a light way, that even children will listen along happily, and ask for the next episode. I first came across Stephen Fry many moons ago as a comic actor in the Blackadder series, and while he has obviously gone on to do more serious stuff, he is still very, very funny. As he points out, the Greek myths don’t always fit together chronologically, but in his telling, it seems like they do and together make a coherent origin myth and worldview.īut what really makes the book wonderful is the stories and Fry’s enthusiasm for them. (Twice, the first lot of humans get lost in a flood so a new type has to be propagated).

And in Mythos Stephen Fry does tell the Greek myths very much as a history, with different epochs, first the Titans, then the Gods, then humans. Greek myths have had such a profound impact on our language and literature that it’s a period of ‘history’ that it’s very good to know about. Mythos is a retelling of the Greek myths by the brilliant British actor Stephen Fry and one of its joys is being able to listen to it as an audiobook, read aloud by Stephen Fry.

