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Hearing Julie’s description of the assailant and the details of the crime for the first time, Clutter told Leil that Joel’s murder sounded like the work of a child serial killer who had recently been arrested for a similar crime in Texas. Startled by her entry, the murderer dropped the knife and fled. by Joel’s haunting scream, Julie survived a vicious attack by a man she encountered in Joel’s room.
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Her son Joel was slain with a knife that had come from her kitchen. She said that Julie had been the sole focus of a police investigation over a three-year period since the crime occurred despite the fact that Julie described in detail an intruder who randomly targeted her home and her child. student at the University of Indiana, was about to be indicted by a grand jury in Illinois for the murder of her 10-year-old son. The attorney explained that her client, Julie Rea, a Ph.D. The character Lavinia confronts her audience with a question also found in the Aeneid, ‘Can violence and/or war ever create a better future for humankind?’ To see the development of those ideas before they were brought to fruition in her fantasy novel was an extraordinary experience and one that will inform my future writings on Le Guin’s work.In June of 2000, Bill Clutter, a criminal defense investigator with capital experience was contacted by Indiana criminal defense attorney Katheryn Leil. Le Guin’s Lavinia does not ask us to search fruitlessly for a ‘winner-hero’ and a ‘loser-anti-hero’ at the end of the epic battle between Turnus and Aeneas, but to see the tragedy that war brings to human lives. When studying the ways in which Lavinia can inform our understanding of Vergil’s epic, the Aeneid, Le Guin’s preliminary writings on Lavinia and her research on the ancient Romans’ religious beliefs can help us to extend the scholarly dialogue. In particular, I found her ideas about the lives of the proto-Romans, what their landscape looked like, how they worshiped, the Roman sense of pietas, and her consideration of tragic elements within the Aeneid to be critical to my scholarly analysis of the Aeneid’s ending. Le Guin papers, the notebook that she used to take notes on Lavinia. “I was delighted to find, among the Ursula K. In the final report she submitted regarding her visit to the archives, Rea noted: Le Guin fellowship allowed me to do in-depth research in the archives that would not have been possible otherwise and I am extremely grateful to have had this opportunity.” Professor Rea said about her visit to UO, “The Ursula K. She visited Knight Library to complete work on another current book project, Empire without End: Science Fiction, Fantasy and Vergil, which explores why Vergil’s violent foundation story remains relevant in modern science fiction and fantasy, and especially within the novel Lavinia, by Ursula K. Her latest project, Perpetua’s Journey, for Oxford University Press, presents a graphic history of Vibia Perpetua’s prison diary. Professor Rea’s first book, Legendary Rome (2007), explored the Roman poets’ reinvention of Rome’s legendary past for post-civil war Augustan Rome. An associate professor of classics at the University of Florida in Gainesville, she made a research trip to Eugene in October 2015. Rea was one of two scholars selected as a 2014-15 Le Guin Fellow.