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Zoë Tavares Bennett

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Zoë Tavares Bennett

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Zoë is a writer based in Los Angeles, California. She is the author of the ancient Mediterranean mythology-inspired fantasy series The Realm of Emmeson, the historical novel The Sun of God set in Ancient Rome, and the YA romance novel My Sister’s Best Friend.

Zoë graduated from Williams College with a degree in Classics, specializing in Ancient Greek and Latin. She is a proud Centrista, having studied abroad in Rome at the Intercollegiate Center of Classical Studies. Aside from Greek and Latin, Zoë speaks Portuguese (being half-Portuguese herself), Spanish, and is learning Italian, German, and French. She is currently a graduate student in the Proto-Indo-European program at UCLA, interested in Homeric Greek and the mytho-poetic comparisons w
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Zoë Tavares Bennett Middle-earth...surprise, surprise! But I would not linger in the Shire, as nice as it sounds. I would head straight to Rivendell to visit their librar…moreMiddle-earth...surprise, surprise! But I would not linger in the Shire, as nice as it sounds. I would head straight to Rivendell to visit their libraries and archives and explore the mythology and history of Middle-earth. It seems I'll remain nerdy even in fictional book worlds!(less)
Average rating: 3.83 · 136 ratings · 19 reviews · 6 distinct worksSimilar authors
My Sister's Best Friend

3.60 avg rating — 84 ratings4 editions
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The Sun of God

4.28 avg rating — 29 ratings7 editions
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Best Friends & Their Exes (...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 13 ratings3 editions
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The Song of Gaia (The Realm...

4.22 avg rating — 9 ratings2 editions
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The Pillars of the Sea (The...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating3 editions
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Imagining the Roman Empire:...

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More books by Zoë Tavares Bennett…

why dune is really for the girls

I posted this to my TikTok, but I fear this 14-minute video will not be fully appreciated on there, and given that Substack is usually kinder to long-form content, I thought I would post this here, since it is very much like a reflection post I would write out.

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One note: I mention in this video that there are no SFF female-written novels that explicitly have an all-female governing

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Published on November 07, 2025 07:02
Sex, Literature a...
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The Silmarillion
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bookshelves: currently-reading
read in August 2022
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Zoë’s Recent Updates

Zoë is on page 15 of 122 of Sex, Literature and Censorship
Sex, Literature and Censorship by D.H. Lawrence
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Sex, Literature and Censorship by D.H. Lawrence
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The Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien
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Lyra Mystica by Charles Carroll Albertson
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Chapterhouse by Frank Herbert
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Heretics of Dune by Frank Herbert
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The Gnostics by Jacques Lacarrière
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God Emperor of Dune by Frank Herbert
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The selected letters of D.H. Lawrence by D.H. Lawrence
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More of Zoë's books…
D.H. Lawrence
“He sat for long hours among the cypress trees of Tuscany. And never had any trees seemed so like ghosts, like soft, strange, pregnant presences. He lay and watched tall cypresses breathing and communicating, faintly moving and as it were walking in the small wind. And his soul seemed to leave him and to go far away, far back, perhaps, to where life was all different and time passed otherwise than time passes now. As in clairvoyance he perceived it: that our life is only a fragment of the shell of life. That there has been and will be life, human life such as we do not begin to conceive. Much that is life has passed away from men, leaving us all mere bits. In the dark, mindful silence and inflection of the cypress trees, lost races, lost languages, lost human ways of feeling and of knowing. Men have known as we can no more know, have felt as we can no more feel. Great life-realities gone into the darkness. But the cypresses commemorate. In the afternoon, Aaron felt the cypresses rising dark about him, like so many high visitants from an old, lost, lost subtle world, where men had the wonder of demons about them, the aura of demons, such as still clings to the cypresses, in Tuscany.”
D.H. Lawrence, Aaron's Rod

Ursula K. Le Guin
“You thought, as a boy, that a mage is one who can do anything. So I thought, once. So did we all. And the truth is that as a man's real power grows and his knowledge widens, ever the way he can follow grows narrower: until at last he chooses nothing, but does only and wholly what he must do...”
Ursula K. Le Guin, A Wizard of Earthsea

Charlotte Brontë
“Well, life is short at the best: seventy years, they say, pass like like a vapour, like a dream when one awaketh; and every path trod by human feet terminates in one bourne — the grave: the little chink in the surface of this great globe — the furrow where the mighty husbandman with the scythe deposits the seed he has shaken from the ripe stem; and there it falls, decays, and thence it springs again, when the world has rolled round a few times more.

So much for the body: the soul meantime wings its long flight upward, folds its wings on the brink of the sea of fire and glass, and gazing down through the burning clearness, finds there mirrored the vision of the Christian's triple Godhead: the Sovereign Father; the Mediating Son; the Creator Spirit. Such words, at least, have been chosen to express what is inexpressible: to describe what baffles description. The soul's real hereafter, who shall guess?”
Charlotte Brontë, Shirley

Paulo Coelho
“We cover up good gestures with irony and levity — as if love were synonymous with weakness.”
Paulo Coelho, Maktub

Charlotte Brontë
“The sun even rose, — at least a white disk, clear, tintless, and almost chill-looking as ice, — peeped over the dark crest of a hill, changed to silver the livid edge of the cloud above it, and looked solemnly down the whole length of the den…”
Charlotte Brontë, Shirley

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