The Alcestiad: Or, A Life In the Sun

Summary
In The Alcestaid Thornton Wilder retells for us the ancient legend of Alcestis, Queen of Thessaly, who gave her life for her husband Admetus, beloved of the Sun Apollo, and was brought back from Hell by Hercules. Wilder's Alcestis is a seeker after understanding, to whom "there is only misery, and that is ignorance." Her life as wife, mother, Queen -- like Emily;s in Our Town -- is apparently idyllic happiness is destroyed by death. But neither death or happiness is what it seems to be, and the tragedy id Apollo's "song in motion...an unfolding -- a part of something larger than we can see." It is followed, according to Greek tradition, by a comic 'satyr' a one-act "diversion" in which Apollo, disguised as a kitchen-boy, confounds The Drunken Sisters -- the Fates -- to save the life of Admetus.
Similar Books
-
Siddhartha
by Hermann Hesse
-
The Gathering
by Anne Enright
-
This House of Sky: Landscapes of a Western Mind
by Ivan Doig
-
Dalai Lama, My Son
by Diki Tsering
-
A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants: A Memoir
by Jaed Coffin
-
Dear Darkness: Poems
by Kevin Young
-
Matters of Life & Death
by Bernard MacLaverty
-
Increase
by Lia Purpura
-
The Phoenix Tree: And Other Stories (Japan's Women Writers)
by Satoko Kizaki
-
Pouring Small Fire
by Susan Manchester
-
Passport
by Angela Hibbs
-
The Observations of Aleksandr Svetlov
by Colette Bryce
-
Long Girl Leaning into the Wind
by Janet Fraser
-
Mother Jackson Murders the Moon
by Gloria Escoffery
-
Nothing Grows in One Place Forever: Poems of a Sicilian American
by Leo Luke Marcello
-
Under The Burnt Leaves
by Scott Faithfull
-
Scizo-Whispers: My Autobiography
by Antonia Urduja Roberts