Charles Frazier’s Novel has Differences in Contrast to Homer’s Epic

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A hero could not be without the support from his or her loved ones. Family supports the hero in their time of need, and motivates the hero to survive. Charles Frazier’s novel Cold Mountain has differences in contrast to Homer’s epic, The Odyssey. The works differ because the main characters have different family situations to go home to. Odysseus has a loving wife and son, while Inman does not know if the girl he loves will marry him. Even though the works can be proven different, Cold Mountain and The Odyssey can be compared. The works show how the main characters use basic essentials of life to help the characters return home. The characters’ strength to return home comes from food, help from others, and motivation.
Life or death situations often involve food in The Odyssey and Cold Mountain. In The Odyssey, food plays a key part in Odysseus’s journeys. When Odysseus and his men arrived at the island of the Phaeacians, Odysseus did not tell the Phaeacians his story until everyone had been fed: “There is no boon in life more sweet, I say, than when a summer joy holds all the realm, and banqueters sit listening to a harper in a great hall, by rows of tables heaped with bread and roast meat” (Homer 145). The men had been fed and Odysseus beings to tell his battle stories. Odysseus tells the story of when they plundered the island of Ismaros. One of the biggest concerns of the men was the food supply: “Sheep after sheep they butchered by the surf, and shambling cattle, feasting” (146). Food plays a key role in surviving during a war, without food there would be no hope of returning home. The Odyssey shows how people will go through great hardships to obtain the necessary nourishment.
Just like in The Odyssey, the main character of C...

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...ily given up. Odysseus and Inman decided all their pain and suffering would be worth it if they could return home to see the faces of the ones they love.
The heroes in Cold Mountain and The Odyssey have many similarities in their journey home. Odysseus and Inman both use food, help from others, and motivation to return home. Without those three basic essentials they would not have survived to see their loved ones. The heroes return home after the long journey, escaping from the war they had been fighting in. Odysseus and Inman have been away for so long, but finally get to see their loved ones. A hero knows food, help from others, and motivation determines how long the journey lasts.

Works Cited

Frazier, Charles. Cold Mountain. New York: Atlantic Monthly, 1997. Print.

Homer, and Robert Fitzgerald. The Odyssey. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998. Print

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