Difference between revisions of "Gilgamesh the King"

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'''''Gilgamesh the King''''' is a novel written by [[Jeffrey Robbins]]. His guide dog [[Gilly]] is named after the title character.
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[[Image:GilgameshtheKing.png|thumb|360px|[[Hudson]] holding a braille edition of '''''Gilgamesh the King'''''.]]
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'''''Gilgamesh the King''''' is a novel written by [[Jeffrey Robbins]]. His guide dog [[Gilly]] is named after the title character. ''([[A Lighthouse in the Sea of Time|"A Lighthouse in the Sea of Time"]])''
  
==Real-World Background==
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==Real World Background==
 
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Robbins's novel was presumably about Gilgamesh, a legendary king of Uruk in ancient Sumeria, whose deeds were recounted in the Epic of Gilgamesh. (Among these were his befriending the wild man Enkidu, defeating the ogre Humbaba and the Bull of Heaven, meeting Utnapishtim, the Noah-like survivor of a great flood, and attempting in vain to secure a [[magic]]al plant of immortality.) [https://www.s8.org/gargoyles/askgreg/search.php?qid=13607]
Robbins' novel was presumably about Gilgamesh, a legendary king of Uruk in ancient Sumeria, whose deeds were recounted in the Epic of Gilgamesh. (Among these were his befriending the wild man Enkidu, defeating the ogre Humbaba and the Bull of Heaven, meeting Utnapishtim, the Noah-like survivor of a great flood, and attempting in vain to secure a magical plant of immortality.)
 
  
 
A real novel by the same name has been written about Gilgamesh, by Robert Silverberg.
 
A real novel by the same name has been written about Gilgamesh, by Robert Silverberg.
  
==See also==
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==See Also==
 
*{{wikipedia2|Gilgamesh|Gilgamesh}}
 
*{{wikipedia2|Gilgamesh|Gilgamesh}}
  

Latest revision as of 15:52, 4 September 2023

Hudson holding a braille edition of Gilgamesh the King.

Gilgamesh the King is a novel written by Jeffrey Robbins. His guide dog Gilly is named after the title character. ("A Lighthouse in the Sea of Time")

Real World Background

Robbins's novel was presumably about Gilgamesh, a legendary king of Uruk in ancient Sumeria, whose deeds were recounted in the Epic of Gilgamesh. (Among these were his befriending the wild man Enkidu, defeating the ogre Humbaba and the Bull of Heaven, meeting Utnapishtim, the Noah-like survivor of a great flood, and attempting in vain to secure a magical plant of immortality.) [1]

A real novel by the same name has been written about Gilgamesh, by Robert Silverberg.

See Also

  • Gilgamesh at Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia