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?
Madeline Miller
Hello, and thank you for your note! I am the type of writer who believes that once a book is published and out in the world it belongs to its readers as much as to me--and whatever you find in the text is yours to interpret as you see fit. So if that's your take on Pasiphae, I think you should stick with it! (In my own imagination, I agree that I think Pasiphae never does anything by accident). And that's interesting to draw a parallel to Medusa, another maligned and dangerous woman from Greek myth. Circe's flashing eyes come from her father Helios--all of the sun-god's children have them.
More Answered Questions
lfreaton
asked
Madeline Miller:
Thank you for being a writer in my day and age. I literally gobbled up/read Circe then Song of Achilles in a week. These stories' are worlds, perhaps divinely inspired, helping this reader transcend today just enough to be remembered to life, itself: magic and mystery, virtue and its pains in discovery and, above all, love. What other classics did you rely on to write?
Supriya Joshi
asked
Madeline Miller:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I just finished the brilliant Song of Achilles (After finishing Circe) and loved every bit of it! Considering how "Achilles Heel" is such a predominantly used phrase to indicate a point of weakness, I was wondering whether not making Achilles invulnerable apart from on his heel was a conscious decision? Or did you just choose to go with alternate legends that do not say that he was dipped in river styx as a kid?
(hide spoiler)]
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