The Song of Achilles

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So Much Win! The Song of Achilles, I’m Looking at You!

9780062060617_0_CoverCongratulations to Madeline Miller! You know we are all super huge fans of this book, so we are beyond happy to tell you that The Song of Achilles has won the 2012 Orange Prize for Fiction! The Orange Prize celebrates excellence, originality and accessibility in women’s writing from throughout the world. At an awards ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall in London, the judges presented Madeline with the Bessie, a limited edition bronze figurine.

Joanna Trollope, Chair of Judges, said: “This is a more than worthy winner – original, passionate, inventive and uplifting. Homer would be proud of her.”

Click through for more information on the Orange Prize

– Annie

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Orange Prize Shortlist

9780062060624_0_CoverGuess what? Tres exciting news! Back in March we were thrilled because 9780062049810_0_Cover the Orange Prize longlist came out, and The Song of Achilles and State of Wonder were both on it (woot!).  Welllll….THEY BOTH MADE THE SHORTLIST TOO!  :::Pause for effect:::

Congratulations to two stellar books by two stellar women!  If you haven't read them, please add them to your wish list. Summer reading? Mother's/Father's Day?  Random Wednesday evening?  There are plenty of occassions for a present from a loved one (hint, hint kids) or from yourself. 

In other news, we are all currently in Houston, booth unpacked and looking fab, awaiting this evening and the opening hours of TLA.  Stop by Booth 1613 and say hi if you are around. Would love to see you!

– Annie

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SLJ Dishes with Madeline Miller

SAThe Song of Achilles is another debut novel that had us all at hello.  Building on the groundwork of The Iliad, Madeline Miller’s page-turning, profoundly moving and blisteringly paced retelling of the epic Trojan War engages the reader immediately; the New York TImes said it "is drenched with longing not seen since “Brokeback Mountain,” Yowza! Miller has a BA and MA in Latin and Ancient Greek (she's actually read The Illiad in ancient Greek – yeah, me too), and studied at the Yale School of Drama, specializing in adapting classical tales to a modern audience, so she knows exactly how to weave a compelling tale. 

She also happens to be on the of the loveliest people this side of the River Styx.

School Library Journal sat down with Madeline to find out what inspired her and how she formed her beautiful story:

When did you first hear the Iliad?

My mother began reading the Iliad and Greek myths to me when I was a child, and from the first, I was completely hooked. Even despite the gods and monsters, the stories felt intensely real to me. The heroes themselves weren't like the heroes in other books—they were angry, grief-stricken, passionate, and full of faults. I felt like I was being given a scandalous peek at the adult world. And, of course, I loved the thrilling adventures.

I was lucky to have a really terrific Latin teacher in high school, who not only encouraged my interest in Latin, but also offered courses in extra-curricular Greek. I jumped at the chance. I was so excited to be able to read these works in their original language. It was no longer just about the stories themselves—which were still amazing—but also about the incredible poetry. Reading Vergil's Aeneid and Homer's Iliad together was a literary revelation. Both men are master craftsmen of the highest order.

For the rest of the interview, check out the SLJ site.

– Annie

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Gregory Maguire Interviews Madeline Miller!

Gregory_maguire_author_photoAround these parts, we are huge fans of both Gregory Maguire and Madeline Miller (check out Kayleigh's interview with her).  So when this transcript landed in our inbox, well, let's just say we were excited.  In case you're joining us late, Gregory Maguire is the author of the Wicked series (the latest, and final entry is Out of Oz) and Madeline's magnificent novel The Song of Achilles hits shelves next year. The Song of Achilles is a lyrical, moving retelling of Homer's The Iliad and happens to be one of the most satisfying love stories to grace our desks in ages. Take it away, Gregory!

1.  Ms. Miller, you write with the confidence of the zealously inspired, taking as your material one of the great foundation texts of world literature. In three millennia or so, The Iliad has garnered somewhat wider attention than The Wizard of Oz, with which I have played, so I have to ask in admiration and in real curiosity: where do you get the noive? I would almost be tempted to bandy about the word “hubris,” just to prove some point about not having lost my notes from tenth grade World Civ, but really, you handle the material so alertly, so respectfully, that hubris doesn’t enter into it. But nerve does. How did you come to dare to take on such a daunting task, and for your first book? And without training wheels?

A little knowledge is a dangerous thing, and in my case it was just dangerous enough to get me started writing.  If I had stopped to ponder, I think I might have been too intimidated.  But I had a few things working for me, which included the fact that Patroclus is such an underdog.  Giving him voice felt a little like standing up for him, like some kind of Lorax of ancient Greek mythology. I had been intensely frustrated by a number of articles I had read that kept side-stepping the love between him and Achilles, which to me felt so obviously at the story’s heart.  There was even one article—I’ve repressed who wrote it—that kept commenting that Achilles’ grief and anger at Patroclus’ death was out of character, and they couldn’t understand why he was so upset.  So partially I was propelled by a desire to set the record straight, as I saw it.

The other thing that helped me, I think, was the fact that I never imagined the book as re-writing Homer.  Instead, I made the Iliad a fixed point on the horizon and wrote towards it.  I knew what Achilles and Patroclus became; I wanted to describe how they got there, and what went on between them in the scenes that Homer doesn’t show.  I will say that at some point a friend of mine—let’s be honest, an ex-boyfriend—referred to the story as “Homeric fan fiction.”  That was fairly dampening.  But I decided: so be it.  If it’s fan fiction, it’s fan fiction.  I’m still going to write it. 

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