Breakfast of Champions brings you 'Battle of the Books'!
What are the best 100 books ever written? The ones everyone should know? What would we save next time civilisation is threatened with destruction? Breakfast of Champions is here to help. Each episode will match great books with appropriate booze, along with facts, banter, shortcuts and chances to have your say. So join us for some legendary thinking and drinking, as together we cover the best of 5,000 years of human civilisation - after all: it belongs to you!
Episodes

Thursday Sep 19, 2024
Thursday Sep 19, 2024
Listen:
If there was ever a case for subsidies for the arts… Theatre was invented by the Greeks. The Athenians were actually paid to attend theatrical competitions, as a civic and even religious duty. Athenian POWs would quote their great playwrites to get their captors to treat them kindly. But who was the best, are they still relevant today, and is it ever a good idea to have with your mum..?Battle of the Books - Round 3Aeschylus – The Oresteia (Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers, The Furies).Sophocles – The Theban Plays (Oedipus Rex, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone).Euripides – The Medea (often packaged up with other great Euripides play).Wildcard: Aristophanes – The Frogs (ditto, usually packaged with other classic Aristophanes plays – look out in particular for Lysistrata). ShortcutsPasolini – Oedipus Rex; Medea: surreal, mesmeric arthouse adaptations of the two classics. Audible have a full-cast adaptation of the three Theban Plays available for free to subscribers.Battle of the BoozeAriousios Natural Chiotiko from Chios – old school, almost Homeric red from the home of ancient Greek wine. The perfect match for these ancient stories – and your own severed leg. Best served at 150 degrees Celsius? Poll of ChampionsWe want your votes! Which book would you save? Vote here!FeedbackWould you sacrifice your daughter to improve the weather? We’d love to hear from you with thoughts, comments, questions and suggestions – click here!

Thursday Sep 12, 2024
Thursday Sep 12, 2024
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The stories of the Trojan War and its aftermath are a foundation of Western civilisation. They’re also some of the greatest books ever written, and much better than modern versions of the stories. But which is the greatest of all?Battle of the Books - Round 2Homer – The Iliad (available in many translations; Robert Fagles does a very accessible version in modern verse for Penguin Classics).Homer – The Odyssey (the Peter Jones translation for Penguin Classics is a good place to start).Wildcard: Virgil – The Aeneid (we like the Fagles translation for Penguin; there’s also a good abridged audio version with Derek Jacobi and Ralph Fiennes).ShortcutsOddly, no good ones, unless you count the magnificent 80s cartoon, ‘Ulysses 31’. The Avenger (1962) – is an Italian sword and sandals adaptation of the Aeneid, but not a patch on the book. And please, whatever you do with your life, don’t watch the Brad Pitt film ‘Troy’.Battle of the BoozeBuck’s Fizz - Take any fizz, add orange juice; the perfect drink for breakfast or long car journeys.Nero di Troia – Literally ‘Black Trojan’: an Italian red grape variety. Goes well with that greatest of Aeneas’s discoveries: pizza. Proof that Rome was founded by Trojans.Poll of ChampionsWe want your votes! Which book would you save? Vote here!FeedbackAre there any sequels as good as or better than the original? We’d love to hear from you with thoughts, comments, questions and suggestions – email us at brekofchamps@gmail.com.

Thursday Sep 05, 2024
Thursday Sep 05, 2024
Listen:
Civilisation began with the brewing of beer, but followed up with another great invention: books!In this episode, we look at the first great books ever written, and ask which we should save if civilisation is destroyed. After all, it’s happened before…Battle of the Books - Round 1The Enuma Elish, also known as The Babylonian Creation Myth (available in various editions; Oxford World Classics combines it with Gilgamesh and other stories in ‘Myths From Mesopotamia’) The Epic of Gilgamesh (there are various different versions, but Penguin Classics has an easy to read translation which combines the surviving fragments into a short, coherent whole)Wildcard: The Tale of Sinuhe (combined with other Ancient Egyptian short stories by Oxford World Classics)ShortcutsNo good shortcuts this week (with absolutely no apologies to Russell Crowe and Peter Ustinov), but check out Delacroix’s painting of the Death of Sardanapalus – otherwise known as Ashurbanipal: his civilisation was destroyed, but fortunately his best books survivedBattle of the BoozeBeavertown Neck Oil IPA – hoppy and gluggable: just the way Gilgamesh liked it!Beavertown Smog Rocket Porter – dark and complex: perfect for drinking through a straw… Poll of ChampionsWe want your votes! Which book would you save? Vote here!FeedbackWe’d love to hear from you with thoughts, comments, questions and suggestions – email us at brekofchamps@gmail.com.