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Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Circe by Madeline Miller

Circe by Madeline Miller.  (I wrote about this on my other blog in April.  I'm just copying and pasting instead of writing another review)  

It was wonderful!  Beautiful prose and a fascinating look at myths and gods from the point of view of Circe, daughter of Helios, who drove his chariot of the sun across the sky each day.  Circe (unloved child, nymph, sorceress, witch) exiled to her island tells her version of the gods and heroes and monsters she knew.  

Circe has a depth that the other, more powerful gods lack.  She has the ability of introspection; she makes mistakes and regrets them.  She resents the power of both the Titans and the Olympians and stands against them as best she can.

Her first rebellion was a kindness to Prometheus when--as a timid child--she brought him nectar in secret.  Prometheus, the god who aided mortals, is aided by the young Circe; a theme develops. 

A few excerpts...

At one point, Circe speaks of her beautiful loom, a gift from Daedalus, innovator and craftsman:  "I have it still.  It sits near my hearth and has even found its way into the songs.  Perhaps that is no surprise, Poets like such symmetries."

  Witch Circe skilled at spinning spells and threads alike, at weaving charms and cloths:  Who am I to spoil an easy hexameter?"  

She recalls a song she has heard of her meeting with Odysseus:  "I was not surprised by the portrait of myself:  the proud witch undone before the hero's sword, kneeling and begging for mercy.  Humbling women seems to be a chief pastime of poets.  As if there can be no story unless we crawl and weep."

Later, in a conversation with Penelope, Penelope tells Circe:  "I am from Sparta.  We know about old soldiers there.  The trembling hands, the startling from sleep.  The man who spills his wine every time the trumpets blow."  I like that passage because I never thought of the Greek warriors suffering from PTSD, but of course they did.  
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Madeline Miller's Circe is one of my favorite retellings of ancient myths.  I love the way different authors interpret the stories: telling the tales from one POV or another, adhering  to the original or expanding and enhancing incidents, and sometimes, changing outcomes entirely.

There are also some other wonderful retellings available:  The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood and Weight by Jeanette Winterson are also great examples of modern mythic retellings; these are much shorter, condensed, but powerful.    Antigo Nick is a campy, amusing modern translation of Antigone by Anne Carson.

Do you have a favorite myth or modern retelling?

Read in April.  Blog post scheduled for June 26.

NetGalley/Little, Brown

Historical Fiction/Myth.  July 10, 2018.  Print length:  400 pages.

11 comments:

  1. I shared your review of this book from the other blog with my friend Loretta (she had collage art at HOSTS) who is mad about mythology. Don't know if she has had a chance to read it yet or not. You make the book really appealing.

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    1. The prose is beautiful, and I thought the plot was an amazing synthesis of myth and Circe's personal memoir. I hope your friend likes it as much as I do!

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  2. I know that Rick Riodan's books are YA books, but I was so pleased at how popular his Percy Jackson books were when I worked at the library. They were a great starting point for kids to learn about mythology and many of them came back and asked for more books about those stories. A good thing.

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    1. :) My greanddaughter loves the Percy Jackson books and has learned a lot of mythology through reading them!

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  3. This one and The Penelopiad are both on my list, as is For the Winner by Emily Hauser which is about Atalanta. All three sound like like good reads to me, but then I enjoy good retellings of the myths. :)

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    1. Oh, I always loved the Atalanta story and the golden apples! I will have to look for Hauser's For the Winner!

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  4. I didn't love Circe but I did really enjoy Miller's debut The Song of Achilles. I have also read The Penelopiad and liked it a lot. I think my favorite Greek myth re-telling that I have read is The King Must Die by Mary Renault because it takes the myth of Theseus and shows how it might have happened in reality...no gods or godesses but maybe how it really went down and then through re-telling got changed in to legend.

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    1. I did love Circe, but I need to read The Song of Achilles! And I need to add The King Must Die to my list. :)

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  5. Retellings are a hit or miss to me; that said I've read a few good reviews about this book and the last I checked this one is on hold by a few readers at my neighbourhood library so it'll take me a while if I want to read this. :)

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    1. I loved this one, but I know what you mean about retellings be hit or miss. :)

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  6. I am eager to read this one and am so glad you liked it, Jenclair. It is at the top of my wish list.

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