Lavinia
Books | Fiction / Historical / Ancient
3.7
(128)
Ursula K. Le Guin
"A transporting novel told in the voice of a girl Virgil left in the margins. It is an absorbing, reverent, magnificent story.” —Cleveland Plain DealerNational Book Award–winning literary legend Ursula K. Le Guin reimagines Virgil's epic poem The Aeneid through the eyes and voice of Lavinia, Aeneas' last wife.In The Aeneid, Vergil’s hero fights to claim the king’s daughter, Lavinia, with whom he is destined to found an empire. Lavinia herself never speaks a word. Now, Ursula K. Le Guin gives Lavinia a voice in a novel that takes us to the half-wild world of ancient Italy, when Rome was a muddy village near seven hills.Lavinia grows up knowing nothing but peace and freedom, until suitors come. Her mother wants her to marry handsome, ambitious Turnus. But omens and prophecies spoken by the sacred springs say she must marry a foreigner—that she will be the cause of a bitter war—and that her husband will not live long. When a fleet of Trojan ships sails up the Tiber, Lavinia decides to take her destiny into her own hands. And so she tells us what Vergil did not: the story of her life, and of the love of her life.
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More Details:
Author
Ursula K. Le Guin
Pages
288
Publisher
HarperCollins
Published Date
2008-04-21
ISBN
0156034581 9780156034586
Ratings
Google: 2.5
Community ReviewsSee all
"Ursula LeGuin is such a legend in the fantasy world that when I discovered she’d written a female centered novel based on the Aeneid, I was expecting a masterpiece along the lines of Marian Zimmer Bradley’s Mists of Avalon or Madeline Miller’s Song of Achilles.<br/><br/>Meh.<br/><br/>Full disclosure: I’ve never read The Aeneid, so I wasn’t familiar with Lavinia’s tale. I’m sad to report that her story simply didn’t grab me: she was not an interesting character, and her situation did not resonate. The climactic battle between the Latins and the surviving Trojans felt even more nonsensical than the original Trojan War, with none of the tragic grandeur: there’s no one to spark the imagination like an Odysseus or a Hector or a Cassandra. Lavinia’s own motivations are muddled, it’s hard to root for her when it’s unclear what she wants, or why.<br/><br/>A disappointment. Back to Earthsea!"
"Once I read through the complicated beginning I found this book quite entertaining."
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Tanya Andoniadis