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I was not expecting to love this like I did.
I liked this for its philosophical insights and how the setting comes to life in Lavinia‘s day to day, and for this I would read again.
But wasn't sure in how at times the story is contrived in how it unfolds and for having characters that are all good (Aeneas) or all bad (Turnus (and later Acsanius)) – and so to me feels less real.
#Fiction #books #readaway2024 #eBook #Romance #adaptation
Beautifully written but I didn't really enjoy it that much, sadly.
Lavinia, daughter of a king, promised to one, destined for another, & the future of Rome.
Loved this so much, but I hate that little blurb on the front. This story is about so much more than Lavinia‘s marriage to Aeneus & the war between her people and the Trojans. It‘s about the power a woman could wield, about how much control we have over our own stories, about the role that fate plays in our lives, & the beginnings of an empire. 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌑
@mrsmarch @BookmarkTavern @5feet.of.fury Have you read any of these retellings? I‘m leaning toward Lavinia, but let me know!!
This is the Aeneid told from the point of view of Lavinia who's just barely mentioned in the poem. I think she did a great job with this. Definitely not her normal genre.
#AuthorAMonth @Soubhiville
#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
Lavinia, a Latin princess, has many suitors but she is not interested in any of them until Aeneas arrives from Troy.
Another woman from legend gets the chance to tell her own story, but she herself also reflects on whether she actually exists outside the story as told by Vergil. Enjoyable but if even the main character isn't sure whether she exists it's difficult to feel any emotional involvement in what's going on.