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Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers"I gave you your life. Now you're wondering, will I take it, too?" These intriguing lines -- the only surviving fragment of the ancient Roman poet Ovid's play Medea -- form the spindle around which the darkly erotic plot of Jane Alison's first novel is spun. Her vivid fictional narrative imagines a missing chapter in the life of the poet, in which he travels to the Black Sea and meets Xenia, a young woman with marvelous, otherworldly charms, in whom Ovid sees the perfect muse for his first attempt at tragedy. Obsessed with the possibility of his own artistic immortality, Ovid becomes ever more dependent on Xenia to enact the drama he can no longer invent. But he betrays his love, bringing about a reversal of fate, and allowing the tragedy he had hoped to write to consume the writer himself. Alison weaves a richly detailed portrait of Rome: its denizens, customs, laws, and architecture. From the squalor of the docks to the exotic dishes and deftly treacherous banter of a patrician dinner party, Xenia learns to navigate the intrigues and gossip of her celebrated lover's world. Against this rich backdrop, Alison has spun an intricate psychological drama, exploring the larger themes of fate, betrayal, and the nature of fiction itself. (Spring 2001 Selection)
Overview
psychological manipulation, and an ingenious meditation on love, art and immortality. When Ovid encounters a woman who embodies the fictitious creations of his soon-to-be published Metamorphoses, he is ...