Memoirs of Hadrian

by Marguerite Yourcenar

Old Book of the Week , April 20, 2020

Phinney by Post #64

I really think of this as two books. There's the novel itself, a beautiful, thoughtful channeling of the great late-Roman emperor that is graced by an elegant, regal reticence and one of the rare powerful-but-admirable main characters in literature. And then there's Yourcenar's twenty-page afterword, "Reflections on the Composition of Memoirs of Hadrian," which is one of my very favorite pieces of writing from any time or anywhere, a romance of passion and patience between author and subject that distills Yourcenar's thirty-year struggle, through war and exile, to write the book you hold before you. —Tom Old Book of the Week

— Tom

Memoirs of Hadrian was reviewed in Newsletter #271 on April 20, 2020. For more like this, and other bookish news, sign up for the newsletter .

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