✔ 最佳答案
Ursula Le Guin's "Lavinia." I'm embarrassed to admit that it's been hanging around on my shelves for years unread, mostly because I like to space out books on the same theme by different authors and I've recently reread (well spaced) several books set around the Bronze Age Mediterranean and I'm always a bit apprehensive about retellings where the author tries too hard. It can be really great or really awful and one doesn't like a favourite to make a fool of themselves. Anyway, I found it delightful as a light read, in large part I think because the author is upfront that she's sharing a private reverie with only a casual nod toward the material "accurate," with emphasis on human believability.
"Crow Country" by Mark Cocker because I like corvids and because I lived for a few years in the landscape he writes about so ponderously. (It's a pause between chapters book for me, but not a get rid of book.)