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The Leto Bundle

Marina Warner

$45

Paperback

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English
Vintage
01 March 2002
'An extraordinary novel... Breathtaking in its scope andambition... An enthralling read' - Sunday Express

When a mummy in the Museum of Albion is unpacked it is found to contain a bundle of curious objects and documents which tell of the wanderings of an unknown woman, Leto.

On the run, in a far-off era of civil strife, Leto gives birth to twins, shelters with wolves, survives in a desert stronghold as the lover of its commander, stows away on a ship loaded with plundered antiquities and then works as a maid in a war-torn city. She loses her son but saves her daughter during a long siege.

As the novel sweeps from mythological times and the Middle Ages to the treasure-hunting of Victorian Europe and into the present day, Leto reappears in different guises. Eventually she becomes a servant to a rock singer, and begins to search for her son.
By:  
Imprint:   Vintage
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 130mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   340g
ISBN:   9780099284659
ISBN 10:   0099284650
Pages:   408
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for The Leto Bundle

Myths and fairy tales are crucial presences in Warner's cultural histories (No Go the Bogeyman, 1999, etc.) and novels like Indigo (1992), The Lost Father (1989), and her newest: an ambitious, intermittently chaotic reshaping of the classical tale of Leto. Raped by Zeus, pregnant with the twins Apollo and Artemis, and pursued by Zeus's vengeful consort Hera, Leto (a.k.a. Leda, among other incarnations) becomes the archetypal persecuted wanderer whose sufferings Warner portrays as the wronged woman assumes various subsequent identities identities: at the time of the Crusades, in Victorian England, then a fictionalized Balkan country ( Tirzah ) in the 1970s, unto the present day. Leto's plight attracts the contrasting interests of mousy museum-curator Hortense Fernly (entrusted with the bundle of manuscripts and art objects discovered in what seemed to be Leto's sarcophagus) and schoolteacher Kim McQuoy, a firebrand activist working on behalf of homeless people whenever he's not paralyzed by his obsession with William Blake-inspired pop-rocker Gramercy Poule. Warner doesn't make this mishmash work (who could?-possibly a feminist Pynchon), but her Bundle is alive with quirky inventions, and it's great fun watching her try and fail to pull it all together. (Kirkus Reviews)


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