Heiden provides a useful break from Homeric scholarship's preoccupations with oral performance and the poetic tradition. Through close attention to the structure of the text, he identifies the definitive role of Zeus in the Iliad's narrative and traces the growing importance of creative fabrication as the means by which both gods and humans achieve their ends. By showing how the poem's organization fosters and rewards the activity of sense-making, Heiden illuminates the Iliad's ongoing appeal to audiences of all types and periods.