Yawar
asked
Madeline Miller:
Hi, I gulped down Circe in a day and will be reading Song of Achilles soon. Thank you for writing these tellings, I always enjoy looking for the hidden meaning in them. Do you feel that you have a story to tell about Athena, too? For all her schemes and shortcomings, she is still an intriguing character, a warrior and counselor in a world of men.
Madeline Miller
Dear Yawar,
Thank you so much for reading, for the generous words, and for the question about Athena! She has always been a fascinating figure--a woman, as you say, in a world of men. She can be noble and decisive, raging, spiteful, wise, merciful, even playful. I always liked her appearance in book V of the Iliad, where she tells Diomedes not to accidentally stab any gods in his battle-spree--unless he sees Aphrodite, then he should go for it. (The follow up to this is that he does actually wound Aphrodite on the wrist, who then goes crying up to Olympus, where Athena and Hera wait to make fun of her.) For someone so wise and rational, she certainly goes in for a lot of vengeance! But I think there could be a great story there: perhaps she feels that her position rests on people's respect for her power, and if she allows anyone to get away with any insult to it, she will lose everything. I don't have any plans to write about her, but there are so many rich myths to draw upon, and I hope that others will!
Thank you so much for reading, for the generous words, and for the question about Athena! She has always been a fascinating figure--a woman, as you say, in a world of men. She can be noble and decisive, raging, spiteful, wise, merciful, even playful. I always liked her appearance in book V of the Iliad, where she tells Diomedes not to accidentally stab any gods in his battle-spree--unless he sees Aphrodite, then he should go for it. (The follow up to this is that he does actually wound Aphrodite on the wrist, who then goes crying up to Olympus, where Athena and Hera wait to make fun of her.) For someone so wise and rational, she certainly goes in for a lot of vengeance! But I think there could be a great story there: perhaps she feels that her position rests on people's respect for her power, and if she allows anyone to get away with any insult to it, she will lose everything. I don't have any plans to write about her, but there are so many rich myths to draw upon, and I hope that others will!
More Answered Questions
Grace Self
asked
Madeline Miller:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Throughout TSOA I believed Thetis to be the villain of the story, but by the end I found myself crying over the weird and complex relationship between the three of them (Patroclus, Achilles and herself). What were your thoughts on writing her role in this story? Who or what is the real villain?
(hide spoiler)]
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?
Lindz
asked
Madeline Miller:
I absolutely LOVE "The Song of Achilles". It instantly became my favorite book! I was wondering about something. In an interview about the book, you said that you spent 5 years creating the first draft, then you scrapped it and started again. Why did you scrap the first draft? And did you completely delete it, or is there still a copy of it lurking somewhere? Thank you so much for writing such a beautiful book!
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Jun 02, 2018 01:14PM · flag