Alcestis
By (Author) Katherine Beutner
Soho Press
Soho Press
10th October 2023
5th September 2023
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
312
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
For fans of The Song of Achilles, a queer and fiercely feminist retelling of a little-known Greek myth- the ultimate story of sacrifice and forbidden desire-now in a deluxe reissue. In Greek myth, Alcestis is known as the ideal wife; she loved her husband so much that she died and went to the Underworld in his place. But who was Alcestis before she was married Other than her love for Admetus, what circumstances led her to make this ultimate sacrifice And what happened to her in the three days she spent in the Underworld Katharine Beutner's lush, emotionally devastating debut explores the magical reality of Ancient Greece, where gods attend weddings and the afterlife is just a river away, as Alcestis goes on a heroine's journey from sheltered princess to self-actualized savior-redefining love and discovering her own power. Giving an achingly beautiful voice to the most misunderstood wives of Greek mythology, Alcestis is the Underworld as you've never seen it before. This deluxe edition featuresdiscussion questions, a craft essay, and a bonus short story.
Praise for Alcestis
Winner of the Publishing Triangles Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction
Finalist for the BSFS Compton Crook Award
Finalist for a Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Debut Fiction
[A]n engaging, subversive reimagining of the tale of the eponymous Greek heroine who is upheld as a shining example of the dutiful wife for her selfless sacrifice. Katharine Buetners Alcestis is a far more willful heroine, and her encounters with the gods of the underworld resonate with a genuine sense of the numinous.
Jacqueline Carey, Namaahs Kiss and Kushiels Dart
In the tradition of great retellings like Mary Renaults The King Must Die or Ursula K. LeGuins Lavinia, Beutner helps us re-see the familiar . . . Beutner brings scholarly rigor and feminista analysis to her portrayal of life as a royal Greek woman in the Bronze Age . . . Impossible to put down . . . Alcestis is nobodys celebratory gayed-up Greek myth (for that, try Ovid). Instead, Beutners retelling is resolutely queer: strange, beautiful, ambivalent, sexually fluid, full of human complexity and godly simplicity.
Andrea Lawlor, Lambda Literary
Everyday life in the ancient world, a no-escape-clause afterlife in the underworld, vulnerable mortals, and passionate and tormented godsall are imagined with intense actuality in a novel that is as intoxicating and hypnotic as the sacred smoke inhaled by the oracles.
Elizabeth Knox, author of The Absolute Book
The piquant novel is as alluring as Persephones pomegranates; its protagonist as exceptional as Beutners vision.
ForeWordMagazine
Powerful, despairing . . . Beutner has taken loss and sadness, sharpened them, and shaped them into a tale at once profound and daring in what it refuses to give its readers. This is the dawn of an extremely promising career.
Open Letters Monthly
Beutner renders her multilayered heroine with beauty and delicacy, and concerns herself with no less than the intricacies of the soul.
Publishers Weekly
Beutner spices up this classic tale with a decidedly Sapphic flavor.
Booklist
Intriguingly imagined, with prose both lyrical and engaging.
Historical Novels Review
Katharine Beutner is an associate professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; previously, she taught in Ohio and Hawai`i. Her second novel, Killingly, is now available from Soho Crime. Her writing has also appeared in Tinfish, Los Angeles Review of Books, Public Books, The Toast, TriQuarterly, Humanities, and other publications. Recently, she received an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award. She is the editor in chief of The Dodge, a magazine of eco-writing and translation.