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Friday, September 2, 2022

Circe by Madeline Miller

This book gives us a feminist slant on the Odyssey. It gives voice to a previously muted female perspective in the classics, forging a great romance from the scraps left to us by the ancients. It is very pleasurable to read, combining lively versions of familiar tales (like the birth of the Minotaur or the arrival of Odysseus and his men on Circe’s island) and snippets of other, related standards (a glance at Daedalus and Icarus; a nod to the ultimate fate of Medea after she and Jason leave Aiaia) with a highly psychologized, redemptive and ultimately exculpatory account of the protagonist herself. The author has made a collage out of a variety of source materials–from Ovid to Homer to another lost epic, the Telegony–but the guiding instinct here is to re-present the classics from the perspective of the women involved in them, and to do so in a way that makes these age-old texts alive with contemporary relevance.

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