Will Byrnes's Reviews > Circe

Circe by Madeline Miller
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it was amazing
bookshelves: historical-fiction, fantasy, books_of_the_year-2018, feminist-dystopian-and-not, fiction

Men, can’t live with ‘em, can’t turn ‘em all into swine.

What do you mean turn them into swine? From her earliest application of her new found transformative skills it is suggested that what Circe turns her unfortunate guests into has more to do with their innermost nature than Circe’s selection of a target form. (The strength of those flowers lay in their sap, which could transform any creature to its truest self.) Clearly her sty residents had an oinky predisposition. And I am sure that there are many who had started the transformation long before landing on her island.

Whaddya call the large sty Circe filled with erstwhile men? A good start.

Ok. You had to know this would be part of the deal for this review. So, now that I have gotten it out of my system, (it is out, right?) we can proceed.
When I was born, the name for what I was did not exist.
It was a word that Barbara Bush might have had in mind when she described Geraldine Ferraro, her husband’s opponent for the Vice Presidency, in 1984. “"I can't say it, but it rhymes with 'rich,'" she said, later insisting that the word in question did not begin with a “b,” but a “w.” Sure, whatever. But in this case, I suppose both might apply. Circe is indeed the first witch in western literature. And many a sailing crew might have had unkind things to say about her.

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Madeline Miller - image from The Times

Our primary introduction to Circe (which we pronounce as Sir-Sea, and even Miller goes along with this, so people don’t throw things at her. But for how it might be pronounced in Greek, you know, the proper way, you might check out this link. Put that down, there will be no throwing of things in this review!) was that wondrous classic of Western literature, The Odyssey. Given how many times this and its companion volume, The Iliad, have been reworked through the ages, it is no surprise that there have been many variations on the stories they told. Circe’s story has seen its share of re-imaginings as well. But Miller tries to stick fairly close to the Homeric version. Be warned, though, some license was taken, and other sources inspired the work as well. But it is from Homer that we get the primary association we have with her name, the magical transmutation of men into pigs.

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George Romney's 1782 portrait of Emma Hamilton as Circe - image from wikipedia

We follow the life of our Ur-witch from birth to whatever. She did not start out with much by way of godly powers. Her mother, Perse, daughter of the sea-god Oceanos, was a nymph, and her father was Helios, the sun god. Despite the lofty position of Pop’s place in things, Circe was just a nymph, on the low end of the godly powers scale. This did not help in the family to which she had been born. Not one of her parents’ favorites, she was blessed with neither power nor beauty, had a very ungod-like human-level voice, and her sibs were not exactly the nicest. Kinda tough to keep up when daddy is the actual bloody sun.

Years pass, and one day she comes across a mortal fisherman. He seems pretty nice, someone she can talk to. She’d like to take it to the next stage, so she lays low, listens in on family gatherings, and picks up intel on substances that might be used to effect powerful and advantageous changes. She asks her grandmother, Tethys, (very Lannisterish wife AND SISTER to Oceanos) to transform him into a god for her, but Granny throws her out, alarmed when her granddaughter mentions this pharmakos stuff she had been looking into. Left to her own devices she tries this out on her bf, making him into his truest self. It does not end the way she’d hoped. (Pearls before you-know-what.) Not the last bad experience she would have with a man.

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Levy’s 1889 Circe - image from wikipedia

Her relationships with men are actually not all bad. Daddy is singularly unfeeling, and can be pretty dim for such a bright bulb, and her brothers are far less than wonderful, but there is some good in her sibling connections as well. She has a warm interaction with a titan, Prometheus, which is a net positive. Later, she has an interesting relationship with Hermes, who is not to be trusted, but who offers some helpful guidance. And then there are the mortals, Daedalus (the master artist, the Michelangelo, the Leonardo da Vinci of his era), Jason, of Argonaut fame, Odysseus, who you may have heard of, and more. There were dark encounters as well, and thus the whole turning-men-into-pigs thing.

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Brewer's 1892 Circe and Her Swine - image from Wikipedia

Miller has had a passion for the classics since she was eight, when her mother read her the Iliad and began taking her to Egyptian and Greek exhibits at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. It made her a nerdy classmate but was a boon when she got to college and was able to find peers who shared her love of the ancient tales. It was this passion that led her to write her first novel, The Song of Achilles, a reimagining of Achilles relationship with his lover, Patroclus, a delight of a book, a Times bestseller, and winner of the Orange prize. It took her ten years to write her first novel, about seven for this one and the gestation period for number three remains to be seen. She is weighing whether to base it on Shakespeare’s The Tempest or Virgil’s Aeneid. If past is portent, it will be the latter, and should be ready by about 2025.

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Ulysses and Circe, Angelica Kauffmann, 1786. - image from Miller’s site

The central, driving force in the story is Circe becoming her fullest possible self. (I suppose one might say she made a silk purse from a sow’s ear. I wouldn’t, but some might.)
This is the story of a woman finding her power and, as part of that, finding her voice. She starts out really unable to say what she thinks and by the end of the book, she’s able to live life on her terms and say what she thinks and what she feels. - from the Bookriot interview
Most gods are awful sorts, vain, selfish, greedy, careless of the harm they do to others. Circe actually has better inclinations. For instance, when Prometheus is being tortured by the titans for the crime of giving fire to humans, Circe alone is kind to him, bringing him nectar, and talking with him when no one else offers him anything but anger and scorn. She is curious about mortals, and asks him about them, going so far as to cut herself to experience a bit of humanity.

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Carracci's c. 1590 Ulysses and Circe in the Farnese Palace - image from Wikipedia

Livestock comes in for some attention outside the sty. Turns out Circe’s father has a thing for a well-turned fetlock, so maybe she comes by her affinity for animals of all sorts, albeit in a very different way, quite naturally. Her island is rich with diverse fauna, including some close companions most of us would flee. An early version of Doctor Doolittle?
Scholars have debated whether Circe’s pet lions are supposed to be transformed men, or merely tamed beasts. In my novel, I chose to make them actual animals, because I wanted to honor Circe’s connection to Eastern and Anatolian goddesses like Cybele. Such goddesses also had power over fierce animals, and are known by the title Potnia Theron, Mistress of the Beasts.
Not be confused with The Beastmaster

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Circe and Odysseus. Allessandro Allori, 1560 - image from Miller’s site

While she has her darker side (she does change her nymph love-rival Scylla into a beast of epic proportions, which gets her sent to her room, or in this case, island, and there is that pig thing again) she is also a welcoming hostess on her isle of exile, Aiaia. (Which sounds to me like the palindromic beginning of a lament, Aiaiaiaiaiaiaia, which might feel a bit more familiar with a minor transformation, to oy-oy-oy-oy-oy-oy-oy-oy). I mean, she runs a pretty nifty BnB, with free-roaming wild animals, of both the barnyard and terrifying sort, a steady flow of wayward nymphs sent there by desperate parents in hopes that Circe might transform them into less troublesome progeny, a table with a seemingly bottomless supply of food and drink. And she is more than willing to offer special services to world-class mortals, among others. I mean, after that little misunderstanding with Odysseus about his men, (Pigs? What pigs? What could you possibly mean? Oh, you mean those pigs. Oopsy. How careless of me.) she not only invites everyone to stay for a prolonged vacay, but shacks up with the peripatetic one, offers him instructions on reaching the underworld, suggests ways to get past Scylla and Charybdis, and probably packs bag lunches for him and his crew. She is not all bad.

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Barker's 1889 Circe - image from Wikipedia

Circe struggles with the mortals-vs-immortals tension. Her mortal voice makes her less frightening to the short-lived ones, allowing her to establish actual relationships with them that a more boombox-voice-level deity might not be able to manage. Of course, it is still quite limiting that even the youngest of her mortal love interests would wither and die while she remained the same age pretty much forever. Knowing that you will see any man you love die is a definite limiting factor. Yet, she manages. She certainly recognizes what a psycho crew the immortals are, even her immediate family, and respects that mortals who gain fame do so by the sweat of their brow or extreme cunning, (even if it is to dark purpose) not their questionable godly DNA. Reinforcing this is her front row seat to the real-housewives tension between the erstwhile global rulers, the Titans, and the relatively new champions of everything there is, the Olympians. I mean, perpetual torture, thunderbolts, ongoing seditious plots, the nurturing of monsters, wholesale slaughter of mortals? She knows a thing or two, because she’s seen a thing or two.
My thoughts about [Circe as caregiver] really start with the gods, who in Greek myth are horrendous creatures. Selfish, totally invested only in their own desires, and unable to really care for anyone but themselves. Circe has this impulse from the beginning to care for other people. She has this initial encounter with Prometheus where she comes across another god who seems to understand that and also who triggers that impulse in her. I wanted to write about what it’s like when you to want to try to be a good person, but you have absolutely no models for that. How do you construct a moral view coming from a completely immoral family? - from Bookriot interview
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Circe Offering the Cup to Odysseus – by John William Waterhouse – 1891 - image from Wikimedia

Of course, there is a pretty straight line between the sort of MCP hogwash Circe had to endure in the wayback and recent events that have been getting so much attention of late
“I wasn’t trying to write Circe’s story in a modern way… I was just trying to be true to her experience in the ancient world.”
“It was a very eerie experience. I would put the book away and check the news. The top story was literally the same issue I had just been writing about — sexual assault, abuse, men refusing to allow women to have any power ... I was drawn to the mystery of her character — why is she turning men into pigs?”
– from The Times interview
There are plenty of classical connections peppered throughout Circe’s tale. Jason and Medea (niece) pop by for a spell. She is summoned to assist in the birthing of the minotaur (nephew) to her seriously nasty sister. She is part of Scylla’s origin story, interacts with Prometheus (cousin), gives shit to Athena, even heads into the briny deep to take a meeting with a huge sea creature (no, not the Kraaken). Hangs with Penelope (her bf’s wife) and Telemachus (bf’s son), and spends a lot of time with Hermes. She definitely had a life, many even, particularly for someone who was ostracized to live on an island.
For Circe, I would say the Odyssey was my primary touch-stone in the sense that that’s where I started building the character. I take character clues directly from Homer’s text, both large and small. I mentioned her mortal-like voice. The lions. The pigs. And then when I get to the Odysseus episode in the book, I follow Homer obviously very closely… - from the BookRiot interview
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"Circea", #38 in Boccaccio's c. 1365 De Claris Mulieribus, a catalogue of famous women, from a 1474 edition - image from wikipedia
In terms of sources, I used texts from all over the ancient world and a few from the more modern world as well. For Circe herself, I drew inspiration from Ovid’s Metamorphoses and Apollonius of Rhodes’ Argonautica, Vergil’s Aeneid, the lost epic Telegony (which survives only in summary) and myths of the Anatolian goddess Cybele. For other characters, I was inspired by the Iliad, of course, the tragedies (specifically the Oresteia, Medea and Philoctetes), Vergil’s Aeneid again, Tennyson’s Ulysses and Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida. Alert readers may note a few small pieces of Shakespeare’s Ulysses in my Odysseus! - from Refinery29 interview
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Circe – by Lorenzo Garbieri - image From Maicar Greek Mythology Link

Madeline Miller’s Circe is not a lovelorn, lonely heart desperate for connection in her isolation, but a multi-faceted character (not actually a human being, though), with inner seams of the dark and light sort, with family issues that might seem familiar in feel, if not in external content, with sins on her soul, but a desire to do good, and with a curiosity about the world. She may not have been the brightest light in the house of Helios, but she glowed with an inner strength, a capacity for mercy, an appreciation for genius, beauty and talent, and a fondness for pork. This is the epic story of a life lived to the fullest. Circe is an explorer, a lover, a destroyer, and can be a very angry goddess. This transformative figure is our doorway to a very accessible look at the Greek tales which lie at the root of so much of our culture. If you have a decent grounding in western mythology this will offer a delightful refresher. If you do not, it can offer a delightful introduction, and will no doubt spark a desire to root about for more. Madeline Miller may not have a wand with special powers, or transmogrifying potions at her command, but she demonstrates here a power to transform mere readers into fans. Circe is a fabulous read! You will go hog wild for it. Can you pass the hot dogs? That’s All Folks

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The Sorceress Circe, oil painting by Dosso Dossi, c. 1530; in the Borghese Gallery, RomeSCALA/Art Resource, New York – image from Britannica


Review first posted – 4/27/2018

Publication date – 4/10/2018

December 2018 - Circe wins the 2018 Goodreads Choice Award for favorite Fantasy novel of the year


==========In the summer of 2019 GR reduced the allowable review size by 25%, from 20,000 to 15,000 characters. And then in 2021 GR banned the inclusion of external links in comments. (I used to put the overage there) As a result of these two new restrictions, I have been forced to truncate the review available on Goodreads. To see the entirety, including EXTRA STUFF and all the links, please head on over to my site, Coot's Reviews. No size restrictions there.
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Reading Progress

April 11, 2018 – Started Reading
April 22, 2018 – Shelved
April 22, 2018 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
April 22, 2018 – Shelved as: fantasy
April 22, 2018 – Shelved as: books_of_the_year-2018
April 23, 2018 – Finished Reading
May 4, 2018 – Shelved as: feminist-dystopian-and-not
June 9, 2018 – Shelved as: fiction

Comments Showing 1-50 of 159 (159 new)


message 1: by Will (last edited Sep 04, 2019 09:16PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes reserved


Will Byrnes Thanks, JV. So much potential pig humor, so little space. Great book, though.


message 3: by Vessey (new) - added it

Vessey And this is another awesome review of what seems to be an awesome book. I am crazy about ancient myths and legends. Thanks, Willie! :) I added it.


Will Byrnes Thanks, V. You will definitely love this one.


message 5: by Jennifer (new) - added it

Jennifer Masterson OMG! The Orange Menace photo! Haha! Fabulous review, Will!


message 6: by Will (last edited Feb 01, 2019 07:04AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Jennifer. If you have not already seen it, another wonderful porcine Trump shot can be found here.


message 7: by Shalini (new) - added it

Shalini M Thats a wonderful review!! I had been interested in Greek mythology for a long time, but reading Rick Riordon's series increased my interest much more, and I read up quite a bit on it. Your highly entertaining review has made me highly curious about this book :)


Will Byrnes Thanks, Shalini. So glad you enjoyed the review. You are sure to love the book.


Amy Mei Wickramatunga I have to totally agree with Vessey and Shalini as even I have falen in with luv greek mythology soo much after reading Rick Riordan's aka The myth master's series. You have done a splendid job of writing this perfect review. Hope the book is perfect as well


message 10: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Amy. It is.


message 11: by Lara (new) - added it

Lara Oy Oy Oy


message 12: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes 🙂


message 13: by Jo (new) - rated it 3 stars

Jo Fantastic review Will.


message 14: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Jo
🐷


Rebecca Oh, Will! I am so delighted that I happened to log in to Goodreads this evening and found your (dare I say it?) entrancing review!

First, I MUST get my hands on this book! I am so grateful that you brought it to our collective attention - I might not have known about it otherwise.

This book was made for me. I was first fascinated by classical Greek mythology from before I could read, by looking at the pictures of old paintings in an encyclopedia, and asking my parents what they were about.

That first love has remained with me to this day. So, obviously, I MUST read this book.

Over the years one of the things I've always wondered about is what is the real story was behind the myth.

Like, was Medea really as evil as she was portrayed by the men who passed the story along, or was she actually a victim of rape and abduction, and her children murdered by political operatives on behalf of the powers-that-be of the time? Those who wanted a different alliance for Jason and needed Medea out of the way?

So, I'll have to read this, in the hope that maybe Ms. Miller has had some of the same thoughts about mythological women as I have.

My thanks.


message 16: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Rebecca wrote: "Over the years one of the things I've always wondered about is what is the real story was behind the myth.
Probably no real story at all. I do not really know. But Miller has her own take on Medea.

I was first fascinated by classical Greek mythology from before I could read
Tales of gods and goddesses remain with us, in the hugely popular super-hero genre. (Vampires and werewolves might qualify as well, but at the lower end of things) It appears that such an interest is a persistent element of all human societies across the ages.

I MUST get my hands on this book!
Yes, you must! You would also enjoy The Song of Achilles. There is a link to my review of that in EXTRA STUFF.


message 17: by Cheri (new) - added it

Cheri Fabulous review, Will, loved every bit of it. I've only recently added this to my list, but you've definitely made me hope to read it sooner than I probably will be able to. Loved this!


message 18: by Will (last edited May 03, 2018 09:21PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Cheri. It is delicious.


message 19: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Swaroop


message 20: by Julie welsby (new)

Julie welsby Zoe s should hag
You
Nosjag y sjaq ma love the same A good idea d


message 21: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes huh?


message 22: by Lara (new) - added it

Lara Great review Will.. Well I haven’t actually read your review yet but I’ve gone gay just looking at the pictures


message 23: by Will (last edited May 14, 2018 09:15PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Those shots of Trump as his true self could do that to any straight woman. 🐷


message 24: by Will (last edited Jul 04, 2018 09:15PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes 😎


message 25: by Olga (new) - rated it 5 stars

Olga Thank you for such a deep and nuanced review and for all the "extras". Love it


message 26: by Will (last edited Aug 09, 2018 10:02PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thank you, Olga. Some reviews are more fun to write than others.


message 27: by Janice (new) - added it

Janice Love your review!


message 28: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Janice. This book really stands out.


message 29: by xd_Bryanhiga (new) - added it

xd_Bryanhiga same


message 30: by Myra (new) - added it

Myra Will, your reviews are the absolute super best! I wish I could write even halfway as well as you do. Down your review rabbit hole again now, whoops.


message 31: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes xd Bryanhiga wrote: "same"
Thanks, Xd


Amanda Bannister Reading this one at the moment Will and loving it - your extra info all adds to the enjoyment! Thank you


message 33: by Will (last edited Oct 15, 2018 09:19PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes M wrote: "Will, your reviews are the absolute super best! I wish I could write even halfway as well as you do. Down your review rabbit hole again now, whoops."
Thanks, M. High praise indeed. It gets easier after the first few hundred.


message 34: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Amanda wrote: "Reading this one at the moment Will and loving it - your extra info all adds to the enjoyment! Thank you"
Thanks, Amanda. A fun book. Glad you enjoyed the sausage links.


message 35: by Suzy (new) - rated it 5 stars

Suzy I finished this a while back and just stumbled on your review, Will - brilliant and so fun to read! . . . and probably packs bag lunches for him (Odysseus) and his crew, just one of many times I laughed while reading your review. Thanks for all the illustrations and extras, something I count on from you. Reading your review made me like this book all that much more.

I'm on the hold list at the library for Song of Achilles, hoping to get it soon.


message 36: by Will (last edited Nov 13, 2018 09:04PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Suzy. Achilles is also a wonderful read.


message 37: by LeAnn (new)

LeAnn 79


message 38: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Huh?


message 39: by Zoe (new)

Zoe Awesome review!! Wonderful


message 40: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, BQ


message 41: by summaya (new)

summaya You got me at oinky predisposition, Will 0IP 437 indeed, a great & entertaining review.


message 42: by Asiah bibi (new)

Asiah bibi hi


message 43: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes NISHAR CI wrote: "You got me at oinky predisposition, Will 0IP 437 indeed, a great & entertaining review."
Thanks, Nishar


Stephanie Loved this book and so happy to see your fabulous (as usual) review. The imagery is exactly what I needed.


message 45: by Will (last edited Jan 23, 2019 09:26PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Stephanie.


Susan D'Entremont Who are you? This "review" would get an A in my class! Excellent.


message 47: by Will (last edited Aug 31, 2019 09:05PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Susan. I’m the quiet one in the back row pretending to pay attention but with a book open on my lap, reading.


message 48: by phyllis;) (new)

phyllis;) good view feels like my life most of the time


message 49: by Will (last edited Aug 30, 2019 12:57PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Phyllis


message 50: by Zoe (new)

Zoe awesome review


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