Return to Ithaca

Eyvind Johnson

Pages

300

Year

1946

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

freedom, mythology, tyranny, homecoming

A retelling of the Odyssey set against the backdrop of occupied Europe, Return to Ithaca is Johnson’s most internationally celebrated novel and his most emotionally immediate.

Why Start Here

Johnson takes Homer’s Odyssey and makes it resonate with the living memory of wartime Europe. Odysseus is not a distant mythological hero here but a man exhausted by years of violence, longing simply to go home. The parallels between ancient tyranny and modern occupation are never heavy-handed, they emerge naturally from the telling, giving the novel a double depth that rewards both fast and slow readers.

It is also Johnson’s most accessible major work. The mythological scaffold provides structure and momentum, while his modernist sensibility keeps the prose alive and surprising. You never feel lectured to, only pulled forward.

What to Expect

A layered historical novel that moves between Homer’s world and something that feels unmistakably modern. The style is measured and precise without being cold. Themes of exile, endurance, and the cost of freedom run through every chapter. It is the kind of book that stays with you long after the last page.

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