Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Duchess in danger
The Guardian Weekly
|September 02, 2022
This follow-up to Hamnet mingles fact and poetic fantasy in a Renaissance fable of a girl forced too young into marriage
Here is a novel inspired by a poem describing a painting portraying a young woman who actually lived. Art and artifice are intrinsic to it. In Maggie O’Farrell ’s imagining of 16th-century Italian courtly life, manners make the man, clothes make the woman, and an image is more durable than a person.
In 1558, Lucrezia , daughter of Cosimo de’ Medici, was married to Alfonso d’Este, the Duke of Ferrara . A year after entering her husband’s court in 1560 , aged just 16, she died. Poison was suspected. Several portraits of Lucrezia survive. Nearly 300 years after her death, Robert Browning wrote My Last Duchess, a dramatic monologue in which Duke Alfonso displays a portrait of his late wife and allows the reader to deduce that – insanely jealous – he murdered her. O’Farrell has shuffled historical fact, portraiture and poetic fantasy as the basis for a piece of fiction in which a simple tale, of a girl forced too young into a dynastic marriage, is overlaid with elements from fairy tale and myth.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 02, 2022-Ausgabe von The Guardian Weekly.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
My boyfriend's use of AI stops him thinking for himself
My boyfriend of eight years, who is 44, has ADHD and runs his own business.
2 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
'Our land lets us all breathe clean oxygen'
The Congo River basin is home to a biodiverse ecosystem-and a relentless trade in timber and charcoal
3 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Nations apart: Andrew's UK arrest highlights US passivity on Epstein files
It is a tale of two nations.
2 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Under water: Engulfed by storms, but climate denial grows
In the week between Christmas and the New Year, two Spanish men in their early 50s - friends since childhood - went to a restaurant and did not come home.
3 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The crown in court
A brief history of royal run-ins with the law
3 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Big in Beijing
James Balmont's band, Swim Deep, plays to crowds of hundreds across the UK - but in China, they play to tens of thousands. And they're not the only ones
3 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Trump's Board of Peace is serving private interests more than public good
In Gaza, aid still trickles in at levels relief agencies say are far below what is required.
2 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Needle drops Weight-loss pills are here - and big pharma stands to gain
Oral tablets could bring obesity treatment into the mainstream, with the sector predicted to be worth $200bn by the end of the decade
6 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
How Italians gradually warmed to their Winter Olympics
With the atmosphere in Rome subdued as the Winter Olympics unfolded across northern Italy, travelling to the Games was not on Amity Neumeister's radar.
3 mins
February 27, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Fire and fury
Violence erupts as security forces kill feared cartel boss.
1 min
February 27, 2026
Translate
Change font size

