THE ODYSSEY IN MODERN ENGLISH
Yes, it's that book. The one they assigned in school. The original epic adventure that invented half the tropes in fiction.
Here's the thing: the Odyssey is wild, brutal, and heartbreaking. A man fights his way home from war across a decade of monsters, gods, and catastrophically bad luck. His wife outwits an entire palace full of men trying to take his place. It's one of the greatest stories ever told.
The ancient, formal translations, though? Those are the part that makes it feel like homework.
This edition fixes that.
Same gods. Same monsters. Same "he did WHAT to the Cyclops?" moments. Just in language that doesn't require a classics degree to enjoy.
What's different: The prose. That's it.
No books cut. No scenes removed. No plot simplified. All twenty-four books, every character, every epic showdown, just written so you can actually experience why this story has been gripping readers for nearly three thousand years.
You get the full story without stilted syntax, ye olde phrasing, and sentences you have to read three times to untangle. You get Homer's genius without the barrier.
Still the Odyssey. Just readable.
The Story
The Trojan War is over. Every other Greek hero has made it home. Odysseus hasn't.
For ten years he's been trapped, shipwrecked, hunted, and cursed—battling a one-eyed giant, resisting a witch who turns men into pigs, sailing past sirens whose song means death, and descending into the land of the dead itself. And the whole time, Poseidon, god of the sea, has been making sure he never reaches shore.
Back home on Ithaca, his wife Penelope is holding together a kingdom that's falling apart. Over a hundred suitors have invaded their house, eating through their wealth, pressuring her to remarry, and growing more dangerous by the day. Their son Telemachus is old enough to fight but too outnumbered to act.
When Odysseus finally returns, he comes back as a stranger—disguised, unrecognized, and watching everything. What follows is one of the most patient, calculating, and devastating revenge sequences in all of literature.
Perfect For Readers Who Love:
Epic journeys with impossible odds • Monsters, magic, and gods who play favorites • A hero who survives on cunning, not just strength • Long-game revenge that unfolds like a trap snapping shut • A wife who's smarter than everyone in the room • Loyalty tested across decades of separation • Father-son reunions that will wreck you • Stories where getting home is only half the battle
Who This Edition Is For:
You've been meaning to read this forever but never made it past the first few pages
You tried it in school and bounced off the translation
You love Greek mythology but haven't read the actual source material
You want the full experience. Not a retelling, not a summary, but the real Odyssey in language that moves
Because these stories deserve to be enjoyed, not endured.
Available instantly as a digital download in EPUB format. Compatible with Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, and all major reading apps.
THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO IN MODERN ENGLISH
Yes, it’s that book. The one everyone says is the greatest revenge story ever written.
Here’s the thing: The Count of Monte Cristo is unhinged. A wrongful imprisonment that lasts fourteen years, an escape that shouldn’t be possible, and a revenge plot so intricate it makes every thriller written since look like it’s not even trying. There’s a reason this story has been destroying readers for over 180 years.
The Victorian language, though? That’s the part that stops people cold.
This edition fixes that.
Same betrayal. Same long-game vengeance. Same “he planned what?” moments. Just in language that doesn’t require you to fight through every paragraph to feel what Dumas meant you to feel.
What’s different: The prose. That’s it.
No scenes cut. No plot simplified. No study guide summary pretending to be a novel. Every chapter, every scheme, every devastating reveal, just written so you can actually experience why this book invented the revenge genre.
You get the full story without “ere,” “whereupon,” and sentences that need their own translator. You get Dumas’s genius without the barrier.
Still The Count of Monte Cristo. Just readable.
The Story
On the best day of his life, a promotion, a father who adores him, a fiancée he’s about to marry, Edmond Dantès is arrested, thrown into a dungeon on false charges, and forgotten. He’s nineteen.
For fourteen years, he has nothing but stone walls and silence. Then he meets a fellow prisoner who changes everything, giving him an education, a purpose, and the secret of a fortune beyond imagination.
When Dantès finally escapes, he re-enters the world as the Count of Monte Cristo: wealthy, brilliant, unrecognizable, and patient. One by one, he infiltrates the lives of the men who betrayed him. His revenge is a masterwork. Methodical, elegant, and utterly ruthless.
But as the plan unfolds, the line between justice and cruelty begins to blur. And the cost of vengeance may be the very thing that made him worth saving in the first place.
Perfect For Readers Who Love:
Slow-burn revenge where every move was planned ten steps ahead • Glow-up transformations that rewrite the rules • Morally grey protagonists who make you root for terrible things • Enemies who deserve everything coming to them (and some who don’t) • Intricate plots where every thread connects • Found-family bonds forged in impossible places • Disguises, aliases, and dramatic reveals • Stories that ask whether justice and revenge are the same thing
Who This Edition Is For:
You’ve been meaning to read this forever but the length kept scaring you off
You love revenge plots but don’t want the prose to feel like punishment
You’re tired of saying “I’ve been meaning to read that” every time someone mentions it
You want the full experience, not an abridgment, not a summary, but all 117 chapters of the actual novel in language that moves
Because these stories deserve to be enjoyed, not endured.
Available instantly as a digital download in EPUB format. Compatible with Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, and all major reading apps.
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