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The myths taught us to treat Circe like a warning label: temptress, witch, monster. We’re not buying it. Tonight we step into Madeline Miller’s Circe and look at what happens when the so-called villain is finally allowed to speak in a full human voice.
With our guest Lyndi Whetzel, we trace Circe’s long arc from Helios’s obsidian palace, where she’s mocked, managed, and kept useful, to exile on Aeaea, where witchcraft becomes less about domination and more about survival. Along the way we dig into divine cruelty, patriarchal power, loneliness, revenge, and the way “transformation” keeps showing up as both magic and metaphor. We also talk about why Miller’s writing makes centuries feel intimate, and why familiar Greek mythology landmarks still land with surprise when the perspective shifts.
Then we get honest about the hard parts: violence wrapped in heroic stories, the danger of craving worship, and the moment Circe stops living as a reaction to everyone else’s energy. Motherhood raises the stakes, Athena sharpens the threat, and sacrifice becomes the clearest measure of love in a world that rarely rewards it.
If you love Greek mythology retellings, feminist literature, or character-driven fantasy that refuses simple heroes and villains, hit play. Subscribe, share the episode with a fellow reader, and leave us a review with your take: is immortality a gift, or just another prison?
Support the show
By Elizabeth Hahn and Peter WhetzelSend us Fan Mail
The myths taught us to treat Circe like a warning label: temptress, witch, monster. We’re not buying it. Tonight we step into Madeline Miller’s Circe and look at what happens when the so-called villain is finally allowed to speak in a full human voice.
With our guest Lyndi Whetzel, we trace Circe’s long arc from Helios’s obsidian palace, where she’s mocked, managed, and kept useful, to exile on Aeaea, where witchcraft becomes less about domination and more about survival. Along the way we dig into divine cruelty, patriarchal power, loneliness, revenge, and the way “transformation” keeps showing up as both magic and metaphor. We also talk about why Miller’s writing makes centuries feel intimate, and why familiar Greek mythology landmarks still land with surprise when the perspective shifts.
Then we get honest about the hard parts: violence wrapped in heroic stories, the danger of craving worship, and the moment Circe stops living as a reaction to everyone else’s energy. Motherhood raises the stakes, Athena sharpens the threat, and sacrifice becomes the clearest measure of love in a world that rarely rewards it.
If you love Greek mythology retellings, feminist literature, or character-driven fantasy that refuses simple heroes and villains, hit play. Subscribe, share the episode with a fellow reader, and leave us a review with your take: is immortality a gift, or just another prison?
Support the show