The Golden Asse
The Golden Asse, also known as The Metamorphoses of Apuleius, is the only ancient novel in Latin that has survived in its entirety. It tells the story of Lucius and his desire to practice magic. After seeing his friend's wife transform herself into a bird using a magic spell, he asks Photis, a young servant girl in his friend's house, to do the same to him. However, something goes wrong and Lucius is instead, transformed into an ass. The story then follows Lucius on his adventures, as he goes on both a literal and metaphorical journey, until he is finally turned back into a human by the goddess Isis. Composed of eleven books and forty-eight chapters, the main story has other stories embedded into it, such as the tales of Aristomenes, Thelyphron, Cupid and Psyche, the Tale of the Wife's Tub, the Tale of the Jealous Husband, the Tale of the Fuller's Wife, and the Tale of the Jealous Wife. The Golden Asse has influenced many other writers, including Kafka, Machiavelli, and C. S. Lewis. Full chapter list № 68 in Anne Haight's List of Banned Books.