
Aristophanes
Aristophanes, son of Philippus, of the deme Kydathenaion, was a comic playwright or comedy-writer of ancient Athens and a poet of Old Attic Comedy. Eleven of his forty plays survive virtually complete. These provide the most valuable examples of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy and are used to define it, along with fragments from dozens of lost plays by Aristophanes and his contemporaries.
Books by Aristophanes
2 books available

Clouds
by Aristophanes
3.8(7,395)
In Aristophanes' 'Clouds,' an aging Athenian farmer, Strepsiades, enrolls his spendthrift son, Pheidippides, in Socrates' Thinkery to learn how to manipulate the legal system and evade debts, only to discover that the new sophistry corrupts traditional morality and familial piety.

Lysistrata
by Aristophanes
3.9(35,205)
Tired of endless war, Athenian woman Lysistrata leads a city-wide sex strike to end the Peloponnesian conflict, sparking a funny and serious battle of the sexes that exposes war's foolishness and power dynamics in ancient Greece.