Spinebender Reviews
asked
Madeline Miller:
What books are comfort reads for you? Not necessarily books that hold any literary or artistic merit (although those can be comfort reads too). I'm thinking of books that you come back to again and again, when you're in need of a good read that you know you'll enjoy and will lift your mood.
Madeline Miller
For me, comfort reads have a key quality: I can open the book to any page and get sucked in. My oldest one is Watership Down, by Richard Adams. It's the Aeneid with rabbits, and it stands up to adult reading. I also love Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim. Sharp, funny and ultimately sweet. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (I know, not classically uplifting--but incredible storytelling is always wonderful). Gertrude and Claudius by John Updike, which was the first literary adaptation that I ever read. In the same genre, March by Geraldine Brooks. Heartburn by Nora Ephron. The Aeneid by Vergil. (A strange comfort book, but it's true). And, because I am a Shakespeare director, any of Shakespeare's plays feels like coming home, especially Julius Caesar, King Lear and Troilus and Cressida. I love how when I read them, I am simultaneously hearing them anew, and hearing the voices of actors in past productions I directed. Oh, and The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K LeGuin, and Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin. Just typing the titles of these books has made me want to pull them all off my shelf and start reading! I am sure as soon as I hit submit, I will realize five more I forgot...
More Answered Questions
Firefly
asked
Madeline Miller:
I enjoyed both the Iliad and the Song of Achilles, and it was interesting to see how many differences there were between the two. But one thing I've been wondering about TSoA is were some of the women (especially Deidamia) meant to be unlikable, or is it this way because the story is told not just from a male Ancient Grecian perspective as well as the society of the time?
Alexw
asked
Madeline Miller:
Madeline-thanks for taking questions which adds to the magic of reading of your writing. Two questions please? First- in Circe- when Pasiphae is impregnated by the sacred bull-she tries to pass it off as an "accident" but my feeling was that she wanted the bull to impregnate her so a song could be written about her. 2nd -on cover of Circe-the eyes flash when tilted in light-looks like she is related to Medusa?
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May 02, 2020 11:29PM · flag
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