How to Use These Questions
These questions are built for discussion, not recall. None of them has a single correct answer, and most of them could generate a productive disagreement between two thoughtful readers. Teachers may find it useful to assign two or three questions per reading session rather than working through the full list at once. Book clubs can match questions to each week's assigned section. Independent readers can use them as prompts for annotation, journaling, or writing practice.
The questions are grouped into six sections: Books 1 through 4 (the Telemachy), Books 5 through 8 (Calypso to Phaeacia), Books 9 through 12 (the Wanderings), Books 13 through 20 (the Return to Ithaca), Books 21 through 24 (the Contest and Aftermath), and a final set of overarching questions that work at any point in the reading or after completing the poem. If you are reading the Odyssey for the first time, consider starting with the student introduction for context.
Books 1 to 4: The Telemachy
The Odyssey begins not with Odysseus but with his son. Books 1 through 4 follow Telemachus as he searches for news of his father, confronts the suitors occupying his home, and begins to grow from a helpless boy into a young man capable of standing beside a hero. These questions focus on Telemachus's development, the role of Athena, and the state of Ithaca in Odysseus's absence.
Question 1
Why does Homer begin the Odyssey with Telemachus rather than Odysseus? What does this structural choice accomplish that starting with Odysseus on Calypso's island would not?
Consider what the reader learns about Ithaca, the suitors, and the stakes of the homecoming by seeing them through Telemachus's eyes first.
Question 2
Athena appears to Telemachus disguised as Mentes, a family friend. Why does she use a disguise rather than revealing herself as a goddess? What does this tell us about how gods operate in the Odyssey?
Question 3
Telemachus calls an assembly in Book 2, the first one held in Ithaca in twenty years. He speaks passionately but accomplishes nothing concrete. Is the assembly a failure, or does it serve a purpose that is not immediately obvious?
Question 4
Penelope appears in Book 1 and asks the bard to stop singing about the Trojan War because it reminds her of Odysseus. Telemachus overrules her in front of the suitors. Is this a moment of growth, cruelty, or both?
Examine the tension between Telemachus asserting authority and Penelope's grief. Consider what Homer might be saying about the cost of growing up.
Question 5
In Sparta, Menelaus and Helen tell contrasting stories about Odysseus at Troy. Helen's story casts herself in a sympathetic light; Menelaus's does not. What are we meant to understand about memory, storytelling, and truth from this scene?
This is a strong entry point for discussing unreliable narration and how the Odyssey treats the act of
telling stories itself.
Books 5 to 8: Calypso to Phaeacia
Odysseus finally appears in Book 5, weeping on Calypso's island. He refuses immortality, survives another shipwreck, and washes ashore among the Phaeacians, where he is welcomed as a guest before revealing his identity. These questions address the choices Odysseus makes, the nature of hospitality, and what it means to long for home.
Question 6
Calypso offers Odysseus immortality and eternal youth if he will stay with her. He refuses. What exactly is he choosing, and what is he giving up? Is the choice as obvious as it first appears?
Explore the concept of
nostos and ask whether immortality without belonging is a reward or a punishment.
Question 7
Calypso accuses the gods of a double standard: male gods take mortal lovers freely, but when a goddess does the same, the gods intervene. Is her argument valid? Does the poem acknowledge this unfairness, or does it simply reproduce it?
This question opens a broader discussion about
women in the Odyssey and how the poem's world treats female desire and autonomy.
Question 8
Nausicaa finds Odysseus naked and shipwrecked on the beach and helps him rather than running away. What does this encounter reveal about her character, and what does it reveal about the Phaeacians as a society?
Consider how this scene contrasts with the Cyclops episode. The Phaeacians and Polyphemus represent two extremes of how strangers can be received.
Question 9
Among the Phaeacians, Odysseus weeps when the bard Demodocus sings about the fall of Troy. Why does hearing his own story told by someone else make Odysseus cry? What is the difference between living through an event and hearing it narrated?
This is a key moment for discussing the Odyssey's interest in the power of stories. Connect it to the poem's larger theme of
storytelling as identity.
Question 10
The Phaeacians practice
xenia to an extraordinary degree: they feast Odysseus, give him gifts, and sail him home before they even know his name. Is their hospitality admirable, naive, or something else entirely?
Ask whether the poem rewards the Phaeacians for their generosity or whether it suggests their way of life is fragile and unsustainable.
Books 9 to 12: The Wanderings
These are the books most people think of when they hear "the Odyssey": the Cyclops, the Sirens, Circe, the underworld, Scylla and Charybdis. Crucially, all of these stories are narrated by Odysseus himself at the Phaeacian court. The questions below address both the events and the fact that we are hearing them from a narrator with reasons to shape his own story.
Question 11
In
the Cyclops episode, Odysseus's cleverest moment (calling himself "Nobody") and his most self-destructive moment (shouting his real name) happen within minutes of each other. What does this tell us about Odysseus as a character?
Focus on the tension between cunning and pride. Ask whether these two qualities are connected or whether they are at war with each other inside Odysseus.
Question 12
Odysseus spends a year with Circe in comfort and pleasure before his men remind him that they want to go home. What does this delay say about Odysseus? Is he being tempted, or is he choosing to forget?
Consider whether the year with Circe reveals a side of Odysseus that complicates the "faithful husband" interpretation. Compare this with his time on Calypso's island.
Question 13
In the underworld, Achilles tells Odysseus he would rather be a living servant than king of the dead. Does the Odyssey agree with Achilles? Does this statement overturn the values of the Iliad, or does it complicate them?
This is one of the most debated passages in all of Homer. Explore what the poem values: glory, survival, or something more nuanced than either.
Question 14
Odysseus ties himself to the mast so he can hear the
Sirens' song without being destroyed by it. Is this an act of wisdom, an act of pride, or both? Why does he need to hear them at all?
Ask whether it is ever possible to experience danger "safely," and whether Odysseus's need to hear every story, to know everything, is a strength or a flaw.
Question 15
Odysseus chooses to sail past Scylla, knowing she will kill six of his men, rather than risk Charybdis, which could destroy the entire ship. Is sacrificing six men to save the rest a moral decision or a practical one? Is there a difference?
This is an effective question for discussing leadership, the ethics of sacrifice, and whether the "lesser evil" is still evil.
Question 16
The crew kills the cattle of the sun god Helios despite being warned that doing so will destroy them. Odysseus is asleep when it happens. Is Homer excusing Odysseus, or is a leader still responsible for what his crew does in his absence?
Consider the theme of leadership and accountability. Compare this to other moments where Odysseus's men act against his instructions.
Question 17
Books 9 through 12 are narrated by Odysseus, not by the poet. How much should we trust his account? Is there anything in his telling that suggests he might be exaggerating, omitting, or reshaping events?
This question works well for advanced readers. Examine whether Odysseus has reasons to present himself in a particular light to the Phaeacian court.
Books 13 to 20: The Return to Ithaca
Odysseus arrives home but cannot simply walk through his front door. Disguised as a beggar by Athena, he must observe, plan, and test the people around him before revealing himself. These books are quieter than the Wanderings, but they contain some of the poem's most powerful scenes: the reunion with his dog Argos, the recognition by his nurse Eurycleia, and the long, painful testing of loyalty.
Question 18
Athena disguises Odysseus as an old beggar before he enters his own home. Why is this disguise necessary? What would happen if Odysseus simply revealed himself immediately?
Think about what Odysseus needs to learn before he can act, and what the disguise reveals about the state of his household and the nature of power.
Question 19
Argos, Odysseus's old dog, recognizes his master after twenty years, wags his tail, and dies. Why does Homer include this scene? What does it accomplish that a human recognition scene could not?
Consider what Argos represents. His condition, neglected on a dung heap, mirrors the state of the household. His recognition is the one moment of pure, uncomplicated loyalty in the poem.
Question 20
Eumaeus the swineherd is faithful to Odysseus even though he has no proof his master is alive. What motivates his loyalty? Is it personal devotion, duty, habit, or something else?
Explore what
loyalty means when there is no reward in sight. Compare Eumaeus's faithfulness with the disloyalty of the goatherd Melanthius.
Question 21
Odysseus tests almost everyone before revealing himself: Eumaeus, Telemachus, Penelope. Is this caution justified, or does his need to test people reveal a troubling inability to trust?
Ask whether twenty years of deception and survival have changed Odysseus into someone who cannot stop calculating, even with the people who love him most.
Question 22
Penelope tells the disguised Odysseus about a dream in which an eagle kills her geese. She says she is unsure whether the dream is meaningful. Is she genuinely uncertain, or is she testing the beggar?
This is one of the poem's great interpretive puzzles. Consider the possibility that Penelope suspects who the beggar is and is communicating indirectly.
Question 23
The suitors abuse the disguised Odysseus, throwing stools at him and mocking him. Does their treatment of a beggar reveal their true character, or is Homer stacking the deck to justify what happens to them later?
Discuss whether the suitors are genuinely villainous or whether the poem constructs them as villains to make the slaughter feel justified. See also
the xenia theme.
Books 21 to 24: The Contest and Aftermath
Penelope sets the trial of the bow. Odysseus strings it, reveals himself, and slaughters the suitors. The poem then moves through recognition, reunion, and a final confrontation that is resolved not by human agency but by divine command. These closing books raise the Odyssey's hardest questions about justice, violence, and closure.
Question 24
Penelope announces the
contest of the bow just as Odysseus has returned in disguise. Is the timing a coincidence, or does Penelope somehow know? If she knows, why does she not say so?
This question has been debated for millennia. Consider what it would mean for Penelope's character if she is acting with awareness she never makes explicit.
Question 25
The slaughter of the suitors takes up much of Books 21 and 22. Is this justice, revenge, or both? Can you draw a clear line between the two?
Examine the
moral framework of the poem. Consider whether divine sanction (Athena's presence, Zeus's omens) changes the moral character of the killing.
Question 26
After the battle, the disloyal serving women are forced to clean up the blood of the suitors and are then hanged. Telemachus overrides Odysseus's original order for a different method of execution, choosing hanging because he considers them unworthy of a clean death. What does this moment reveal about Telemachus, and how should a modern reader respond to it?
This is one of the poem's most disturbing passages. Explore the tension between reading the Odyssey on its own terms and holding it to contemporary moral standards.
Question 27
When Penelope and Odysseus are finally alone, she tests him with the secret of their bed, which was carved from a living olive tree and could not be moved. Why does Penelope need this test? Why is it not enough that he strung the bow?
Consider what the bed test proves that the bow test does not. Think about the difference between physical identity and intimate knowledge, and what kind of proof Penelope truly needs.
Question 28
The
final scene of the poem resolves the blood feud between Odysseus and the families of the dead suitors through divine intervention: Athena commands peace, and Zeus sends a thunderbolt. Is this a satisfying ending? Does it resolve the poem's moral tensions or simply suppress them?
Ask whether a peace imposed by the gods is the same as a peace earned by human beings. Consider whether the poem is saying that some problems can only be solved by a force greater than the people involved.
Question 29
Laertes, Odysseus's aging father, fights in the final battle and throws a spear that kills one of the attacking kinsmen. Why does Homer give this moment to Laertes? What does it mean for the
father-son theme to have three generations fighting together?
Explore what the three-generation reunion (Laertes, Odysseus, Telemachus) represents. Consider whether the poem treats this as a restoration or as a final, precarious victory.
Overarching Questions
These questions work at any point during the reading or after completing the poem. They address themes, structures, and ideas that run through the entire Odyssey rather than belonging to a single section.
Question 30
The Odyssey is often described as a poem about homecoming. But is Odysseus the same person who left Ithaca twenty years earlier? Can you truly "come home" if you have changed beyond recognition?
Explore
nostos as a concept. Ask whether the poem's homecoming is a return to the past or the creation of something new.
Question 31
Athena intervenes throughout the poem on Odysseus's behalf: she disguises him, strengthens him, guides Telemachus, and fights beside him against the suitors. Does her constant involvement diminish Odysseus's achievements, or is divine support simply part of how heroism works in Homer's world?
This question touches on
fate versus free will and what it means to earn a victory when a god is helping you earn it.
Question 32
Compare the different models of
hospitality in the poem: the Phaeacians, Eumaeus, the Cyclops, and the suitors. What does Homer's treatment of these hosts suggest about the relationship between civilization and generosity?
Consider that the most generous hosts (the Phaeacians) and the worst violators (the Cyclops, the suitors) represent opposing endpoints of the same moral spectrum. What does the poem place in between?
Question 33
The poem features several powerful female characters: Penelope, Athena, Circe, Calypso, Nausicaa, Helen. Do these women have genuine agency in the poem, or are they defined entirely by their relationships to Odysseus and other men?
This is a question worth approaching without a predetermined answer. Examine specific scenes where female characters make independent choices and scenes where they do not.
Question 34
Is Odysseus a good person? Set aside whether he is a good hero or a good warrior. By the standards the poem itself establishes, is he a good husband, father, king, and human being?
This deceptively simple question can generate the longest discussion of any on this list. Require evidence from the text for any claim made in either direction. For character context, see
Who Is Odysseus?
Question 35
The Odyssey and the Iliad are often read as companion poems. If the Iliad is about what war does to people, what is the Odyssey about? Can you state the central concern of the poem in a single sentence?
Challenge the group to be precise. "It is about homecoming" is a start, but push for specificity: whose homecoming, at what cost, and what does it prove about the world Homer describes?
Question 36
Zeus says at the beginning of the poem that mortals blame the gods for their suffering, but in truth they bring additional suffering upon themselves through their own recklessness. Does the rest of the poem support this claim, or does it complicate it?
Track the causes of suffering throughout the poem. How much is caused by divine will, how much by human choice, and how much by forces that do not fit neatly into either category?
Question 37
Nearly three thousand years after its composition, the Odyssey remains one of the most widely read works of literature in the world. Why? What does the poem offer that other ancient texts do not?
This question works especially well as a closing discussion. Ask the group to articulate what, specifically, they took away from reading the poem, and whether they expect that to change with time. For a
thematic entry point, consider the enduring relevance of the poem's moral lessons.
Tips for Leading an Odyssey Discussion
The strongest discussions begin with a specific passage, not a general topic. Rather than asking "what is the theme of hospitality?" try asking "what does the Cyclops's response to Odysseus's request for guest-gifts tell us about what hospitality means in this world?" Anchoring the conversation in a concrete moment gives participants something to point to, disagree about, and build upon.
When a discussion stalls, comparison often restarts it. Ask participants to compare two characters (Penelope and Calypso), two scenes (the Phaeacian feast and the suitors' feast), or two versions of the same motif (Telemachus's journey and Odysseus's journey). Comparison forces participants to articulate what makes each element distinct rather than settling for surface-level observations.
Finally, the best Odyssey discussions acknowledge discomfort. The poem contains violence, slavery, and moral judgments that do not align with contemporary values. Rather than avoiding these elements, use them as discussion fuel. Asking "does this scene bother you, and if so, why?" can produce more thoughtful engagement than any study-guide question. The poem is old enough to be genuinely foreign, and that foreignness is part of what makes reading it worthwhile.
For structured essay writing based on these questions, see the Odyssey essay topics page. For a broader overview of the poem's structure and context, visit the study guide.
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