<p><i>The Routledge Guidebook to Nietzsche¿s This Spoke Zarathustra</i> is an engaging introduction to this rich and provocative philosophical text. Nietzsche is one of the most influential and yet least understood philosophers of the nineteenth century. This is also true of his self-proclaimed<b> </b>magnum opus, <i>Thus Spoke Zarathustra</i>. The work has been widely influential but is still far from being understood. On the one hand, the<b> </b>principal aims and even the genre of <i>Zarathustra </i>remains unclear. On the other hand, the work<b> </b>expresses, in poetic fashion, some of Nietzsche¿s most important, controversial, and<b> </b>enigmatic doctrines: the <i>Uebermensch</i>, the eternal recurrence of the same, and the will to<b> </b>power. This guidebook provides an overview and a fresh interpretation of these themes, a chapter-by-chapter reading of the text, and an overarching argument that <i>Zarathustra </i>should be understood as Nietzsche¿s own three-act Greek tragedy