![]() ![]() Willie shares her “understood” family tree with readers early on, then employs her recent archaeological training and unearths letters, photographs, and documents to assemble her “Massively Revised Genealogy”. Though a work-in-progress, the building’s lifetimes can be “traced like bones on an X-ray” Willie’s past, raised by a single mother, also seems clear initially, but proves complicated. Ambitious for revisioning a medieval woman’s life, but unremarkable given Groff’s experience weaving stories from history and imagination.Ĭonsider the heroine’s family home in The Monsters of Templeton: a 1793 cottage with one wing dating to the Victorian era and the other to the 1970s. As the imagined story of twelfth-century poet Marie de France, Matrix-from the Latin ‘mater’ for mother-is simultaneously ambitious and unremarkable. Impressive-and then 2021’s Matrixbustles onto the scene and eclipses these worthy predecessors. On the other side, the debut praised by Stephen King-2008’s The Monsters of Templeton, shiny-faced and insistent-perched alongside its follow-up Arcadia (2012), pockets bulging with “Year’s Best” listings and rave reviews. To one side, dressed for success, would be the story collections- Delicate Edible Birds (2009) and Florida (2018)-one with remarkable origin stories (like publications in Ploughshares and The Atlantic) and the other sporting a National Book Award Finalist seal. Since President Obama chose it as his favourite 2015 book, Groff’s third novel has claimed centre stage. If Lauren Groff’s previous publications came to life for a photo shoot, Fates & Furies would elbow its way to the foreground.
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