Giulia Bigolina's _Urania_ is not only the first Italian prose romance written by a woman (fascinatingly, though probably coincidentally, bearing the same title as the first English prose romance written by a woman, which was written by Mary Wroth about sixty years later), it is also a delightful read. Although never published until the 21st century, the romance demonstrates the influence of some of the greatest writers and tropes of Italian Renaissance literature -- unrequited love, cross-dressing and disguise, romantic perigranations, the "Woman Question" -- all with a decidedly feminist twist. The excellent translation by Valeria Finucci (who discovered and published the text in its first-ever Italian edition over 400 years after its composition) is eminently readable, designed to engage both casual and scholarly readers alike. The series introduction provides a good general overview of gender issues as well as the position of women writers in the early modern period, while Finucci's concise but well-researched introduction to the text is enlightening and engaging.