Book title:
Galatea
Author:
Madeline Miller
Genre:
Ancient retelling, fantasy, short story
Published: First
published in 2013; this edition from 2022
49 pages
My rating:
5/5
It was
almost sweet the way they worried about me.
“You’re so
pale,” the nurse said. “You must keep quiet until your color returns.”
“I’m always
this colour,” I said. “Because I used to be made of stone.”
Galatea is Madeline Miller’s short story that retells the myth of the sculptor Pygmalion and his statue-come-to-life Galatea. The short story is based on Ovid’s Metamorphoses, which narrates several ancient myths where people become animals or plants, or as in the case of this myth, an inanimate object comes to life. In Ovid’s version, sculptor Pygmalion is horrified by “shameless” and “lascivious” prostitutes and instead carves himself a woman from ivory, making her more perfect than any woman can be. He falls in love with his creation and after many prayers, the goddess Venus brings the statue to life. Ovid's version seems to indicate that the couple lives happily ever after.