His daughter, Athena. She likes Odysseus because he fought for the Athenians.
odysseus
The speaker in Book 13 of Homer's Odyssey is Odysseus, talking to his Phaeacian hosts. The tone is one of longing and nostalgia as Odysseus recounts his longing for his homeland of Ithaca and his desire to return after many years of wandering.
So long as you give credit to the speaker, you can use quotes in your book. Be certain you enclose the quote in quotation marks and write their name after the quote, such as the following: "Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing" - Benjamin Franklin You might also write the quotation in italics to emphasize it is a quote, if you're writing it at the beginning or end of a section of your book.
Oh, dude, that quote is from Book 17 of Homer's The Odyssey. It's where Odysseus, the OG traveler, drops some wisdom about how even suffering can be enjoyable once you've been through a lot. Like, it's all about that personal growth and perspective, you know?
The sirens appear in Book 12 of the Odyssey.
If you want to quote from a certain version of the Bible you can do a few sentences or verses. If you quote a lot of it then you must contact the publisher of that Bible. See the front of the Bible for where to locate the company. They are on the web too. If you wish to quote an author you need to contact that author's publisher for permission. If you wish to quote a speaker you need to contact the speaker directly through a letter or an email. Look for a website for that speaker. Always get the permission in writing. Record their permission in your book and put the written document in a special file folder.
"Get out your book." is an imperative sentence.
read the book
In the Odyssey book, they are people who are basically fortune tellers or prophets.
Homer
No
The quote at the beginning of a book is called an epigraph.